Reducing Particulate Emissions in Gasoline Engines

R-471

11/28/2018

Authors Abstract
Content

For years, diesel engines have been the focus of particulate matter emission reductions. Now, however, modern diesel engines emit less particles than a comparable gasoline engine. This transformation necessitates an introduction of particulate reduction strategies for the gasoline-powered vehicle.

Many strategies can be leveraged from diesel engines, but new combustion and engine control technologies will be needed to meet the latest gasoline regulations across the globe. Particulate reduction is a critical health concern in addition to the regulatory requirements. This is a vital issue with real-world implications.

Reducing Particulate Emissions in Gasoline Engines encompasses the current strategies and technologies used to reduce particulates to meet regulatory requirements and curtail health hazards - reviewing principles and applications of these techniques. Highlights and features in the book include:

  • Gasoline particulate filter design, function and applications
  • Coated and uncoated three way catalyst design and integration
  • Measurement of gasoline particulate matter emission, both laboratory and PEMS

The goal is to provide a comprehensive assessment of gasoline particulate emission control to meet regulatory and health requirements - appealing to calibration, development and testing engineers alike.

Meta TagsDetails
ISBN
978-0-7680-9418-3
Citation
Boger, T., and Cutler, W., "Reducing Particulate Emissions in Gasoline Engines,".(Warrendale, PA: SAE International, 2018),.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Nov 28, 2018
Product Code
R-471
Content Type
Reference
Language
English