期刊
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
卷 52, 期 18, 页码 10709-10718出版社
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b03125
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资金
- CCEM
The fast replacement of traditional gasoline port-fuel injection technology with gasoline direct-injection (GDI) vehicles is expected to have a substantial impact on urban air quality. Herein we report on effects of four prototype gasoline particle filters (GPFs) on exhausts of a 1.6 L Euro-5 GDI vehicle. Two noncoated and two filters with catalytic coatings were investigated. These filters, on average, lowered PN emissions 4-7-fold to 4.0-6.8 X 10(11) particles/km. Genotoxic PAHs were lowered 2-5-fold too with GPF-1-3, with GPF-1 having the highest efficiency, 79% and resulting in 45 ng toxic equivalent concentration (TEQ)/km. Thus, particle filtration efficiencies and reduction of the genotoxic potentials are correlated. GPF-4 showing the poorest particle filtration efficiency (66-78%) also released exhausts with highest genotoxic potential of 240-530 ng TEQ/km. We recently reported particle-number (PN) emissions of four generations of GDI vehicles (Euro-3 to Euro-6) which released, on average, 2.5 X 10(12) +/- 1.8 X 10(12) particles/km exceeding the current European limit of 6.0 X 10(11) particle/km. Thus, the implementation of filters to GDI vehicles requires best-available technology (BAT) with PN efficiencies >98% and catalytic activity, to avoid store-and-release of genotoxic PAHs. In-series applications of BAT-filters to GDI vehicles can lower genotoxic PAHs and soot nanoparticles.
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