RI 2225 Gasoline Losses Due to Incomplete Combustion in Motor Vehicles

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
PHILIP A. ZANG
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
39
File Size:
3649 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1921

Abstract

The rapidly increasing use of motor vehicles in the United States has introduced an entirely new problem in the proper ventilation oftunnels , subways , and other confined spaces through which such machines must pass . This problem was brought to the attention of the Bureau of Mines by the New York and New Jersey State Bridge and Tunnel Commissions with reference to the ventilation of the proposed vehicular tunnel under the Hudson River . This tunnel , consisting of twin tubes 29 feet in diameter and 8500 feet long between entrance and exit , presented an unprecedented problem in ventilation both on account of its length and on account of the traffic density , which is expected to reach a maximum of 1900 vehicles per hour . An exhaustive study by the tunnel engineers of all available data on the amount and composition of automobile exhaust gas disclosed very little information on the percentage of carbon monoxide in motor exhaust gas from the average run of automobiles and trucks under actual operating conditions on the road. It was well known that carburetor adjustment and other operating factors changed the percentage of the poisonous constituent , carbon monoxide , from practically 0 to 12 or 13 per cent ; but no safe estimate could be made of the most probable figure without further investigation .
Citation

APA: PHILIP A. ZANG  (1921)  RI 2225 Gasoline Losses Due to Incomplete Combustion in Motor Vehicles

MLA: PHILIP A. ZANG RI 2225 Gasoline Losses Due to Incomplete Combustion in Motor Vehicles. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1921.

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