RI 7539 Reactivities Of Automotive Emissions From Fuels Of Varied Front-End Composition

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
F. D. Sutterfield
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
16
File Size:
1241 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1971

Abstract

This study was conducted to provide experimental evidence on the effect of modifications of gasoline front-end composition on the photochemical specific reactivities of automotive emissions. Evaporative and evaporative-plus-exhaust emissions from an automobile operated with four fuels of different volatility and varying levels of C.-C5 olefins were irradiated in a 10040 environmental chamber at three sets of initial hydrocarbon-nitrogen oxides concentrations. Reactivity was measured and expressed in terms of rate-of-NO2 formation and dosages of oxidant, peroxyacetyl nitrate, and formaldehyde. The compositional changes that were necessary in reducing fuel volatility were found to have no significant effect on the reactivity of the emissions. However, replacing C4-C5 olefins with saturated components resulted in sharp decreases in all reactivity manifestations observed for the evaporative emission samples. A lesser influence (of C4-C5 olefin replacement) was found with the composite exhaust-plus-evaporative samples; the effect that was observed could be attributed to the evaporative emission portion of the sample. The data therefore suggest that saturation of front-end fuel olefins had no large effect on exhaust emission reactivity.
Citation

APA: F. D. Sutterfield  (1971)  RI 7539 Reactivities Of Automotive Emissions From Fuels Of Varied Front-End Composition

MLA: F. D. Sutterfield RI 7539 Reactivities Of Automotive Emissions From Fuels Of Varied Front-End Composition. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1971.

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