Chassis Dynamometer Emission Measurements from Refuse Trucks Using Dual-Fuel™ Natural Gas Engines
2003-01-3366
11/10/2003
- Event
- Content
- Emissions from 10 refuse trucks equipped with Caterpillar C-10 engines were measured on West Virginia University's (WVU) Transportable Emissions Laboratory in Riverside, California. The engines all used a commercially available Dual-Fuel™ natural gas (DFNG) system supplied by Clean Air Partners Inc. (CAP), and some were also equipped with catalyzed particulate filters (CPFs), also from CAP. The DFNG system introduces natural gas with the intake air and then ignites the gas with a small injection of diesel fuel directly into the cylinder to initiate combustion. Emissions were measured over a modified version of a test cycle (the William H. Martin cycle) previously developed by WVU. The cycle attempts to duplicate a typical curbside refuse collection truck and includes three modes: highway-to-landfill delivery, curbside collection, and compaction. Emissions were compared to similar trucks that used Caterpillar C-10 diesels equipped with Engelhard's DPX catalyzed particulate filters. The average emissions from the trucks using DFNG engines and CPFs showed the same trends in all modes--reduced oxides of nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and similar particulate matter emissions--compared to the similar diesel trucks.
- Pages
- 25
- Citation
- Walkowicz, K., Proc, K., Wayne, S., Nine, R. et al., "Chassis Dynamometer Emission Measurements from Refuse Trucks Using Dual-Fuel™ Natural Gas Engines," SAE Technical Paper 2003-01-3366, 2003, https://doi.org/10.4271/2003-01-3366.