Criteria and air-toxic emissions from in-use automobiles in the national low-emission vehicle program

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Abstract

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) implemented a program to identify tailpipe emissions of criteria and air-toxic contaminants from in-use, light-duty low-emission vehicles (LEVs). EPA recruited 25 LEVs in 2002 and measured emissions on a chassis dynamometer using the cold-start urban dynamometer driving schedule of the Federal Test Procedure. The emissions measured included regulated pollutants, particulate matter, speciated hydrocarbon compounds, and carbonyl compounds. The results provided a comparison of emissions from real-world LEVs with emission standards for criteria and air-toxic compounds. Emission measurements indicated that a portion of the in-use fleet tested exceeded standards for the criteria gases. Real-time regulated and speciated hydrocarbon measurements demonstrated that the majority of emissions occurred during the initial phases of the cold-start portion of the urban dynamometer driving schedule. Overall, the study provided updated emission factor data for real-world, in-use operation of LEVs for improved emissions modeling and mobile source inventory development. © 2005 Air & Waste Management Association.

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APA

Baldauf, R. W., Gabele, P., Crews, W., Snow, R., & Cook, J. R. (2005). Criteria and air-toxic emissions from in-use automobiles in the national low-emission vehicle program. Journal of the Air and Waste Management Association, 55(9), 1263–1268. https://doi.org/10.1080/10473289.2005.10464722

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