Energies (Oct 2022)

Real-Time Measurements of Formaldehyde Emissions from Modern Vehicles

  • Ricardo Suarez-Bertoa,
  • Tommaso Selleri,
  • Roberto Gioria,
  • Anastasios D. Melas,
  • Christian Ferrarese,
  • Jacopo Franzetti,
  • Bertold Arlitt,
  • Naoki Nagura,
  • Takaaki Hanada,
  • Barouch Giechaskiel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/en15207680
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 20
p. 7680

Abstract

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Formaldehyde (HCHO), a carcinogenic carbonyl compound and precursor of tropospheric ozone, can be found in vehicle exhaust. Even though the continuous monitoring of HCHO has been recommended, the real-world emissions from the road transport sector are not commonly available. The main reason for this knowledge gap has been the difficulty to measure HCHO in real-time and during real-world testing. This, for instance, increases the uncertainty of the O3 simulated by air quality models. The present study investigates real-time HCHO measurements comparing three Fourier Transform InfraRed spectrometers (FTIRs) and one Quantum Cascade Laser InfraRed spectrometer (QCL-IR) directly sampling from the exhaust of one gasoline passenger car, one Diesel commercial vehicle and one Diesel heavy-duty vehicle, all meeting recent European emission standards (Euro 6/VI). Non-negligible emissions of HCHO were measured from the Diesel light-duty vehicle, with emissions increasing as temperature decreased. Relatively low emissions were measured for the gasoline car and the Diesel heavy-duty vehicle. The results showed a good correlation between the different instruments under all the conditions tested (in most cases R2 > 0.9). Moreover, it was shown that HCHO can be accurately measured during on-road and real-world-like tests using instruments based on FTIR and QCL-IR technologies.

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