Abstract

Gasoline particulate filter (GPF) is a cost-effective solution to particle number emissions from gasoline direct injection vehicles. Filtration efficiency, as a key parameter of GPF, was usually assessed at chassis level over regulatory drive cycles. However, the promulgation of real driving emission (RDE) requirements in the EU and Chinese regulations necessitates evaluations based on non-legislative cycles to guarantee the on-road emissions are compliant to regulatory requirements. In this research, two aggressive drive cycles, RTS95 at 23degC and modified RDE at 0degC, were complemented to the WLTC to evaluate the filtration efficiency of a catalyzed GPF (cGPF) in fresh conditions to obtain the so-called "worst-case" filtration efficiency. In the WLTC, RTS95, and simulated RDE tests, the filtration efficiency of the test cGPF was 51.1%, 41.3%, and 85.1% respectively. In the simulated RDE test, the test cGPF filtrated solid particles with a diameter above 23nm and 10nm at a similar efficiency. Increased filtration efficiency with heavier soot load could offset the relatively low filtration efficiency in cold-start and warm-up durations, hence the filtration efficiency for a clean cGPF showed higher sensitivity to cycle length over driving dynamics and testing temperature. In acceleration events with cGPF mounted, the particle diameter where number concentration peaked decreased as the engine warmed up. In deceleration events, bimodal and trimodal particle number size distributions with much lower concentrations were observed.

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