Literature DB >> 32417475

On-board monitoring (OBM) for heavy-duty vehicle emissions in China: Regulations, early-stage evaluation and policy recommendations.

Shaojun Zhang1, Pei Zhao2, Liqiang He2, Yanyan Yang3, Baoxian Liu4, Weinan He5, Ying Cheng5, Ying Liu6, Shijie Liu7, Qingyao Hu8, Cheng Huang8, Ye Wu9.   

Abstract

The latest China VI emission standard has introduced a remote monitoring rule for regulating in-use emissions of heavy-duty diesel vehicles (HDDVs). Real-time data regarding engine and aftertreatment operating conditions and tailpipe nitrogen oxides (NOx) concentrations are required to be collected through electronic control unit and on-board NOx sensors by vehicle original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), and then transmitted to environmental authorities. Beijing has developed a local standard that requires OEMs to design China VI-like on-board monitoring (OBM) systems for new China V HDDVs since September 2018. Additionally, Beijing has been a pioneer in retrofitting in-use China IV and China V HDDVs with OBM systems since 2017. This paper contains a timely technical and policy assessment for the state-of-the-art OBM programs in China with a focus on the recent progress in Beijing. Both OEM-performed and retrofitted OBM data were collected from a fleet of OBM-instrumented vehicles. First, our assessment shows high data integrity and quality of OEM-performed OBM systems. In contrast, a considerable fraction of HDDVs equipped with retrofitted OBM systems did not completely report NOx concentrations, intake mass air flow and other parameters. Next, eight OBM-instrumented HDDVs were tested on road by portable emissions measurement systems (PEMSs) to examine the reliability of sensor-based NOx concentrations. The majority (6 of 8) shows a good agreement between OBM and PEMS results with an average relative error of approximately -15%. Furthermore, calculation of NOx mass emissions, inter-trip variability, and alternative methods of enforcing in-use emissions management (e.g., to develop concentration metric-based emission limits) are discussed. This early-stage assessment suggests the OBM approach has the potential to play a central role in in-use emission inspections for HDDVs in China. The regulatory agency should focus more attention to the data integrity and the reliability of NOx sensors by developing effective verification processes.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  China; In-use emission compliance; Nitrogen oxides (NOx), heavy-duty diesel vehicle (HDDV); On-board emission monitoring (OBM)

Year:  2020        PMID: 32417475     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.139045

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  1 in total

1.  Evaluation of Solid Particle Number Sensors for Periodic Technical Inspection of Passenger Cars.

Authors:  Anastasios Melas; Tommaso Selleri; Ricardo Suarez-Bertoa; Barouch Giechaskiel
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-13       Impact factor: 3.576

  1 in total

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