Abstract

Abstract. In the present work, we performed chassis dynamometer experiments to investigate the emissions and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation potential of intermediate-volatility organic compounds (IVOCs) from an on-road Chinese gasoline vehicle. High IVOC emission factors (EFs) and distinct volatility distribution were recognized. The IVOC EFs for the China V vehicle ranged from 12.1 to 226.3 mg per kilogram fuel, with a median value of 83.7 mg per kilogram fuel, which was higher than that from US vehicles. Besides, a large discrepancy in volatility distribution and chemical composition of IVOCs from Chinese gasoline vehicle exhaust was discovered, with larger contributions of B14–B16 compounds (retention time bins corresponding to C14-C16 n-alkanes) and a higher percentage of n-alkanes. Further we investigated the possible reasons that influence the IVOC EFs and volatility distribution and found that fuel type, starting mode, operating cycles and acceleration rates did have an impact on the IVOC EF. When using E10 (ethanol volume ratio of 10 %, v/v) as fuel, the IVOC EF of the tested vehicle was lower than that using commercial China standard V fuel. The average IVOC-to-THC (total hydrocarbon) ratios for gasoline-fueled and E10-fueled gasoline vehicles were 0.07±0.01 and 0.11±0.02, respectively. Cold-start operation had higher IVOC EFs than hot-start operation. The China Light-Duty Vehicle Test Cycle (CLTC) produced 70 % higher IVOCs than those from the Worldwide Harmonized Light Vehicles Test Cycle (WLTC). We found that the tested vehicle emitted more IVOCs at lower acceleration rates, which leads to high EFs under CLTC. The only factor that may influence the volatility distribution and compound composition is the engine aftertreatment system, which has compound and volatility selectivity in exhaust purification. These distinct characteristics in EFs and volatility may result in higher SOA formation potential in China. Using published yield data and a surrogate equivalent method, we estimated SOA formation under different OA (organic aerosol) loading and NOx conditions. Results showed that under low- and high-NOx conditions at different OA loadings, IVOCs contributed more than 80 % of the predicted SOA. Furthermore, we built up a parameterization method to simply estimate the vehicular SOA based on our bottom-up measurement of VOCs (volatile organic compounds) and IVOCs, which would provide another dimension of information when considering the vehicular contribution to the ambient OA. Our results indicate that vehicular IVOCs contribute significantly to SOA, implying the importance of reducing IVOCs when making air pollution controlling policies in urban areas of China.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric fine particulate matter has great impacts on human health, regional air pollution and global climate (Hallquist et al, 2009; Guo et al, 2014b)

  • In order to get a relatively reliable comparison, what we show here is all described in intermediate-volatility organic compounds (IVOCs) emission factors (EFs) which consider both IVOC mass and the fuel consumption

  • Among all of the factors, acceleration rate has the largest influence on the IVOC EFs

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric fine particulate matter has great impacts on human health, regional air pollution and global climate (Hallquist et al, 2009; Guo et al, 2014b). Secondary organic aerosol (SOA), formed from multiple generations of oxidation of thousands of organic gases and vapors, contributes 30 % or more of organic aerosols in different areas of the world (Zhang et al, 2007) It has a great impact on various other atmospheric processes, e.g., new particle formation and growth and black carbon aging (Guo et al, 2020; Peng et al, 2016; Guo et al, 2016). Huang et al (2020) found a similar enhancement in SOA simulations for the Yangtze River Delta (southeastern China) region when adding IVOC emissions into CAMx. Quality Model with Extensions), in which the improvement in SOA was mainly due to the revised IVOC emissions. Huang et al (2020) found a similar enhancement in SOA simulations for the Yangtze River Delta (southeastern China) region when adding IVOC emissions into CAMx They show the importance of volatility distribution and emission parameterization for the model simulation. The emission factors (EFs), volatility and chemical speciation of IVOC emissions from different conditions were investigated, and the SOA formation potential was estimated

Materials and methods
Sampling and chemical analysis
Quantification of IVOCs
Results and discussion
Estimation of SOA production from Chinese vehicle emissions
Atmospheric implications
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