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Measurement of Off-Road Vehicle Emissions in Mexico using three PEMS platforms Miguel Zavala, Rodrigo Gonzalez, Marco Balam, Luisa T. Molina Molina Center for Energy and the Environment Andres Aguilar, Francisco Guardado Instituto Nacional de Ecología y Cambio Climático Daniel Prato, J. Ignacio Huertas Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, Campus Toluca Aron Jazcilevich Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Chandan Misra California Air Resources Board 2015 PEMS Conference & Workshop 5 March 26 & 27, 2015 UCR | CE-CERT 1084 Columbia Ave, Riverside, CA Off-Road Vehicle Emissions in Mexico Objectives 1. To characterize the particulate matter and gaseous emissions of selected diesel-powered off-road mobile sources in Mexico under real-world operating conditions using PEMS. 2. To evaluate the potential emissions reductions by the implementation of emissions control devices. There is a need of off-road vehicle emissions information in Mexico and this is the first pilot project to address this need. Project Activities Visits to sites and vehicles (30) Logistics and planning a) b) c) d) e) • • • SECURITY VEHICLE AVAILABILITY RAIN Inspection of vehicles Opacity Test Oil and fuel sample Inspect the air intake system Visual inspection of the engine Install data logger Measurement Calibrations Selection of vehicles • Design of measurement protocol • Acquisition of control devices PEMS Installation Installation of control devices Calibrations Measurement PEMS for measurements ECOSTAR From ITESM CO2 NDIR CO NDIR NOx NDUV O2 E-Chem AVL-MSS From CARB BC Photoacoustic AXION R/S From UNAM CO2 CO HC NOx O2 PM NDIR NDIR NDIR E-Chem E-Chem LLS Sampling locations and testing procedure Site A Site B Testing area Testing areas Installation area Logistical work 6 months Install PEMS Move to testing area 3 - 4 hours Installation area Test 1 Test 2 Test 3 1 - 2 hours Move back to installation area Uninstall PEMS 2 - 3 hours Assess data Sampling set up Dilution Air HEPA MSS Exhaust SEMTECH EFM ECOSTAR AXION Safety strips Safety during installation and operation was a constant challenge All vehicles tested use ULSD Additional Padding RESULTS: Sampling size No Type Engine Manufacturer/ Baseline Tests year displacement (liters) (minutes) Filter Tests (minutes) Control Type 1 Backhoe A 2010 Komatsu/4.5 74 + 113 178 p-DPF 2 Backhoe B 2010 Komatsu/4.5 117 53 p-DPF 3 Front loader A 2010 Komatsu/23.15 58 65 DPF 4 Front loader B 2010 Komatsu/23.15 67 53 DPF 5 Bulldozer A 2008 Komatsu/15.2 106 36 DPF 6 Bulldozer B 2008 Caterpillar/15.24 81 62 DPF 7 Crane 2009 Link-Belt/7.5 63 8 Tractor 2009 New Holland/4.5 117 73 p-DPF 9 Compressor 1999 Cummins/10 120 10 Generator 2010 Cummins/3.9 54 25 DPF 11 Excavator 2008 Volvo/12.1 82 103 DPF 1052 648 MSS + AXION MSS + ECOSTAR MSS + AXION + ECOSTAR p-DPF Partial flow Diesel Particulate Filter Diversity of sampling modes Moving to testing area Engine startup Lifting and pushing tests Big bucket Lifting tests Small bucket BACKHOE A Moving back to initial area Idling Checking instruments and data gathering PEMS Comparison BULLDOZER B Baseline vs filtered emissions EXCAVATOR [g/s] Baseline With DPF Pollutants relationships GENERATOR PM NOx BC Conclusions 1. Measurements represent off-road emissions data obtained for the first time in Mexico. Ongoing analysis of the data will produce emissions factors by vehicle and operation mode. 2. The observed variability in emissions indicates the need for detailed vehicle operation data (activity data) for inventories. 3. Results showed generally good comparison of CO2, CO, and NOX between ECOSTAR and AXION, but analysis are still ongoing. 4. Substantial BC reductions were observed when using emission control devices. Further analysis will quantify the benefits. 5. The collaboration generated from this project among key institutions can be used to foster the research on off-road sources in Mexico. Collaborators • Molina Center for Energy and the Environment • Instituto Nacional de Ecología y Cambio Climático • LTM Center for Energy and the Environment • Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México • Instituto Tecnológico de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey campus Toluca • California Air Resources Board • Secretaría del Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales • Gobierno del Distrito Federal • TETRA TECH Sponsors • United States Agency for International Development (USAID) • Instituto Nacional de Ecología y Cambio Climático (INECC) • Molina Center for Energy and the Environment (MCE2) Special thanks to: • Ing. Reyes Martínez Cordero of the Planta de Asfalto del Distrito Federal • Ing. Jaqueline de la Cruz of Geo-Construcción • Mr. Antonio Nava of Sistema Maíz