Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Jul 2022)

Oxygenated volatile organic compounds (VOCs) as significant but varied contributors to VOC emissions from vehicles

  • S. Wang,
  • S. Wang,
  • B. Yuan,
  • B. Yuan,
  • C. Wu,
  • C. Wu,
  • C. Wang,
  • C. Wang,
  • T. Li,
  • T. Li,
  • X. He,
  • X. He,
  • Y. Huangfu,
  • Y. Huangfu,
  • J. Qi,
  • J. Qi,
  • X.-B. Li,
  • X.-B. Li,
  • Q. Sha,
  • Q. Sha,
  • M. Zhu,
  • M. Zhu,
  • S. Lou,
  • H. Wang,
  • T. Karl,
  • M. Graus,
  • Z. Yuan,
  • M. Shao,
  • M. Shao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-22-9703-2022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
pp. 9703 – 9720

Abstract

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Vehicular emissions are an important source for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in urban and downwind regions. In this study, we conducted a chassis dynamometer study to investigate VOC emissions from vehicles using gasoline, diesel, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) as fuel. Time-resolved VOC emissions from vehicles are chemically characterized by a proton-transfer-reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometer (PTR-ToF-MS) with high frequency. Our results show that emission factors of VOCs generally decrease with the improvement of emission standards for gasoline vehicles, whereas variations in emission factors for diesel vehicles with emission standards are more diverse. Mass spectrum analysis of the PTR-ToF-MS suggests that cold starts significantly influence VOC emissions of gasoline vehicles, while the influences are less important for diesel vehicles. Large differences in VOC emissions between gasoline and diesel vehicles are observed with emission factors of most VOC species from diesel vehicles being higher than gasoline vehicles, especially for most oxygenated volatile organic compounds (OVOCs) and heavier aromatics. These results indicate quantification of heavier species by the PTR-ToF-MS may be important in the characterization of vehicular exhausts. Our results suggest that VOC pairs (e.g., C14 aromatics / toluene ratio) could potentially provide good indicators for distinguishing emissions from gasoline and diesel vehicles. The fractions of OVOCs in total VOC emissions are determined by combining measurements of hydrocarbons from canisters and online observations of the PTR-ToF-MS. We show that OVOCs contribute 9.4 % ± 5.6 % of total VOC emissions for gasoline vehicles, while the fractions are significantly higher for diesel vehicles (52 %–71 %), highlighting the importance of detecting these OVOC species in diesel emissions. Our study demonstrated that the large number of OVOC species measured by the PTR-ToF-MS are important in the characterization of VOC emissions from vehicles.