Abstract

Vehicle emissions are a major source of carbonyls, which play an important role in atmospheric chemistry and urban air quality. Yet, little data are available for speciated carbonyls emitted by vehicles and especially by heavy-duty diesel vehicles. On-road vehicle emissions of carbonyls have been measured in May 1999 at the Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel, PA. Ten saturated aliphatic aldehydes, 4 saturated aliphatic ketones, 4 unsaturated aliphatic carbonyls, 4 aliphatic dicarbonyls, and 9 aromatic carbonyls have been identified and their concentrations measured. For light-duty (LD) vehicles, total carbonyl emissions were ca. 6.4 mg/km, and the 10 largest emission factors were, in decreasing order, those of formaldehyde (2.58 +/- 1.05 mg/km, ca. 40% of total carbonyls), acetone, acetaldehyde, heptanal, crotonaldehyde, 2-butanone, propanal, acrolein, methacrolein, and benzaldehyde. For weight class 7-8 heavy-duty diesel vehicles (7-8 HD), total carbonyl emissions were ca. 26.1 mg/km, and the 10 largest emission factors were, in decreasing order, those of formaldehyde (6.73 +/- 2.05 mg/km, ca. 26% of total carbonyls), acetaldehyde, acetone, crotonaldehyde, m-tolualdehyde, 2-pentanone, benzaldehyde, a C5 saturated aliphatic aldehyde isomer, 2,5-dimethylbenzaldehyde, and 2-butanone. Aromatic carbonyls, unsaturated aliphatic aldehydes, and aliphatic dicarbonyls represented larger fractions of the total carbonyl emissions for 7-8 HD vehicles than for LD vehicles. For HD vehicles, formaldehyde and acetaldehyde emission factors measured in this study are ca. 4-5 times lower than those measured in previous work. For LD vehicles, emission factors measured in this study are generally lower than those measured in earlier work and are about the same, within reported uncertainties, as those measured in 1992 in the same highway tunnel.

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