Abstract

This work evaluated the nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions of 277 heavy-duty diesel vehicles (HDDVs) from three portable emission measurement system testing programs. HDDVs in these programs were properly maintained before emission testing, so the malfunction indicator lamp (MIL) was not illuminated. NOx emissions of some HDDVs were significantly higher than the certification standard even during hot operations where exhaust temperature was ideal for selective catalytic reduction to reduce NOx. For engines certified to the 0.20 g/bhp-hr NOx standard, hot operation NOx emissions increased with engine age at 0.081 ± 0.016 g/bhp-hr per year. The correlation between emissions and mileage was weak because six trucks showed extraordinarily high apparent emission increase rates reaching several multiples of the standard within the first 15,000 miles of operation. The overall annual increase in NOx emissions for the HDDVs in this study was two-thirds of what was observed in real-world emissions for HDDVs at the Caldecott Tunnel over the past decade. The vehicles at the Caldecott Tunnel would include those without proper maintenance, and the inclusion of these vehicles possibly explains the difference in the rate of emission increase. The results suggest that HDDVs need robust strategies to better control in-use NOx emissions.

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