| Development of a Comprehensive Modal Emissions Model | | By Matthew Barth,Feng An,Theodore Younglove,George Scora,Carrie Levine, University of California, Riverside,Center for Environmental Research and Technology Riverside, CA Marc Ross,University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI, Thomas Wenzel, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA National Cooperative Highway Research Program |
Summary:
In August 1995, the College of Engineering-Center for Environmental Research and Technology (CECERT) at the University of California-Riverside along with researchers from the University of Michigan and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, began a four-year research project to develop a Comprehensive Modal Emissions Model (CMEM), sponsored by the National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP, Project 25-11). The overall objective of the research project was to develop and verify a modal emissions model that accurately reflects Light-Duty Vehicle (LDV, i.e., cars and small trucks) emissions produced as a function of the vehicle's operating mode. The model is comprehensive in the sense that it is able to predict emissions for a wide variety of LDVs in various states of condition (e.g., properly functioning, deteriorated, malfunctioning). The model is now complete and capable of predicting second-by-second tailpipe emissions and fuel consumption for a wide range of vehicle/technology categories. In creating CMEM, over 350 vehicles were extensively tested on a chassis dynamometer, where second-by-second measurements were made of both engine-out and tailpipe emissions of carbonmonoxide, hydrocarbons, oxides of nitrogen, and carbon dioxide. Read More
URL: http://onlinepubs.trb.org/onlinepubs/nchrp/nchrp_w122.pdf
Comprehensive Modal Emissions Model |
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