Particulate Matter Associated with Vehicles on the Road

760039

02/01/1976

Event
1976 Automotive Engineering Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
We have conducted a study to characterize the airborne and settleable particulate matter generated by vehicles on the road, to evaluate the importance of non-exhaust airborne material from vehicles, and to identify the vehicle types producing various airborne particulate species. Two tunnels -- the Allegheny Tunnel of the Pennsulvania Turnpike and the Detroit & Canada Tunnel -- were utilized to isolate the motor vehicle from other sources of particulate matter. Experiments also were performed at sites in the open. The most important conclusions are:
  1. (1)
    Settleable material predominates in the particulate matter associated with traffic; at Allegheny it outweighed the airborne material by nearly two orders of magnitude. It originates mostly from sources other than engine exhausts.
  2. (2)
    Diesel-engine exhaust is the dominant source of airborne particulate matter associated with traffic, with emission rates ∼1 g/mi, at Allegheny where the average speed is ∼50 mi/hr and Diesel trucks comprised ∼10% of the traffic.
  3. (3)
    Carbon is the most abundant element in the airborne particulate matter from traffic; it comes primarily from trucks, and much of it is present in the form of saturated aliphatic hydrocarbons.
  4. (4)
    Airborne particulate matter from traffic has a large surface area -- up to 30 m2/g, or as high as 90 m2/g after removal of extractable organic material.
  5. (5)
    Airborne particulate matter generated by automobiles at 50 mi/hr is <0.1 g/mi, mostly from the exhaust. At least 20% of this (in 1971) was Pb, of which automobiles are the primary source. The Pb g/mi emission rate exhibits a decline during the 1971-1974 period, in keeping with the trend in gasoline Pb levels. Total Pb emissions at 50 mi/hr represent only about half of the Pb consumed. More than half of the Pb emitted is settleable, with a size range centered around several hundred μm.
Conclusions regarding Br/Pb ratios, Zn, Ba, sulfate, and particle size of the airborne and settled material and certain chemical components are presented.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/760039
Pages
19
Citation
Pierson, W., and Brachaczek, W., "Particulate Matter Associated with Vehicles on the Road," SAE Technical Paper 760039, 1976, https://doi.org/10.4271/760039.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1976
Product Code
760039
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English