Abstract

Automotive brake-wear emissions are increasingly important in on-road particulate matter (PM) emission inventory. Previous studies reported a high level of PM emissions from the friction materials of light/medium-duty vehicles, but there are few data available from heavy-duty (HD) vehicles equipped with drum brakes despite their popularity (∼85% in HD vehicle fleet). This study developed a novel tracer-gas-integrated method for brake-wear PM emission measurements and evaluated four HD vehicles on a chassis dynamometer that complied with regulatory exhaust emission testing requirements. Three class-6 vehicles with a similar test weight demonstrated repeatability, with the coefficient of variation in the range of 9-36%. Braking events increased PM concentrations by 3 orders of magnitude above the background level. Resuspension of brake-wear PM also occurred during acceleration and contributed to 8-31% of the total PM2.5 mass. The class-6 vehicles had PM2.5 emissions from a single brake (0.7-1.5 mg/km/brake), generally similar to the level of tail-pipe exhaust PM emissions (0.7-1.5 mg/km/vehicle) of each vehicle. A class-8 vehicle exhibited brake-wear PM2.5 emissions (2.4-3.4 mg/km/brake) significantly higher than the tail-pipe exhaust PM emissions (∼1.3 mg/km/vehicle). This article reports an exceptionally high level of brake-wear PM emissions measured directly from the drum brakes of HD vehicles.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call