Abstract

Gasoline vehicle emission is a major source of urban particulate matter (PM), particularly ultra-fine PM (≤100 nm), exerting adverse health effects. While the PM emissions from port fuel injection (PFI) and gasoline direct injection (GDI) vehicles have been well addressed in previous studies, few studies have reported the PM emission from the new mixed injection (MI) vehicles. Here, we employed a chassis dynamometer to investigate particle emissions under the Worldwide Harmonized Light vehicles Test Cycles (WLTC) from vehicles with three different fuel injection technologies. The PM and particle number (PN) emission factors (EFs) for MI vehicles are 129.53 μg/km and 1.0 × 1013 #/km, respectively. A trend of PFI > MI > GDI is observed for both PM and PN EFs for vehicles with same emission standard. Notably, the PM emissions of MI vehicles are greatly affected by both fuel injection methods at low and medium speeds, but are more significantly affected by PFI at high speeds. MI vehicle shows much lower PM and PN emissions than other vehicles at low-, medium-, and high-speed phases, but substantial hiher ultra-fine PM emission at extra-high speed phase. This is because the insufficient air supplied by naturally-aspirated engine of MI vehicles in the high-load region leads to incomplete combustion and generate large formation of ultra-fine particles. Besides, the gasoline particulate filter reduces 94.5% of PM emission but produces abundant nucleation-mode particles during regeneration at the extra-high speed phase for MI vehicles. Our study gives an insight to the state-of-the-art engine technology, i.e., MI vehicles, and reveals that this new technology is a feasible alternative for simultaneously reducing pollutant emissions from gasoline vehicles.

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