Evaluation of Uncoated Gasoline Particulate Filter Performance for US EPA MY27+ Particulate Mass Emissions Regulation

2024-01-2383

04/09/2024

Features
Event
WCX SAE World Congress Experience
Authors Abstract
Content
The gasoline particulate filter (GPF) represents a practical solution for particulate emissions control in light-duty gasoline-fueled vehicles. It is also seen as an essential technology in North America to meet the upcoming US EPA tailpipe emission regulation, as proposed in the “Multi-pollutant Rule for Model Year 2027”.
The goal of this study was to introduce advanced, uncoated GPF products and measure their particulate mass (PM) reduction performance within the existing US EPA FTP vehicle testing procedures, as detailed in Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) part 1066.
Various state-of-the-art GPF products were characterized for their microstructure properties with lab-bench checks for pressure drop and filtration efficiency, then pre-conditioned with an EPA-recommended 1500 mile on-road break-in, and finally were tested on an AWD vehicle chassis-dyno emissions test cell at both 25°C and -7°C ambient conditions. A modern, T3B70, GTDI light-duty truck served as the test vehicle platform for this study.
This report will show that advanced uncoated GPFs can repeatedly demonstrate high PM filtration efficiency, positioning them well as one solution to meet the US EPA proposed 0.5 mg/mile PM limit. 
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2024-01-2383
Pages
7
Citation
Craig, A., Warkins, J., Wassouf, B., Beall, D. et al., "Evaluation of Uncoated Gasoline Particulate Filter Performance for US EPA MY27+ Particulate Mass Emissions Regulation," SAE Technical Paper 2024-01-2383, 2024, https://doi.org/10.4271/2024-01-2383.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 09
Product Code
2024-01-2383
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English