Atmosphere (Sep 2024)

Effects of Ammonia Mitigation on Secondary Organic Aerosol and Ammonium Nitrate Particle Formation in Photochemical Reacted Gasoline Vehicle Exhausts

  • Hiroyuki Hagino,
  • Risa Uchida

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15091061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. 1061

Abstract

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Gaseous air pollutants emitted primarily by anthropogenic sources form secondary products through photochemical reactions, complicating the regulatory analysis of anthropogenic emissions in the atmosphere. We used an environmental chassis dynamometer and a photochemical smog chamber to conduct a parameter sensitivity experiment to investigate the formation of secondary products from a gasoline passenger car. To simulate the mitigation of ammonia emissions from gasoline vehicle exhausts assuming future emission controls and to allow photochemical oxidation and aging of the vehicle exhaust, ammonia was selectively removed by a series of five denuders installed between the vehicle and photochemical smog chamber. Overall, there were no differences in the formation of secondary organic aerosols and ozone with or without ammonia mitigation. However, the potential for ammonium nitrate particle formation was significantly reduced with ammonia mitigation. In addition, ammonia mitigation resulted in increased aerosol acidity due to nitric acid in the gas phase not being neutralized by ammonia and condensing onto the liquid particle phase, indicating a potentially important secondary effect associated with ammonia mitigation. Thus, we provide new insights into the effects of ammonia mitigation on secondary emissions from gasoline vehicle exhaust and into a potentially useful experimental approach for determining primary and secondary emissions.

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