Overview
ABSTRACT
Air quality is a growing concern for obvious health reasons. The automobile industry has contributed to its improvement by reducing its PMx and NOx emissions driven by ever more stringent regulations. The "Dieselgate" pointed out sometimes-significant differences between regulated and real-life emissions. This accelerated the introduction of a more representative cycle (WLTC) and of stricter than expected limits on pollutants in real driving conditions (RDE). After a regulatory reminder, the article will review the state of the art of emissions from the latest generation engines and present associated depollution technologies.
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Read the articleAUTHORS
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Nils MATTHESS: PhD in Process Engineering, Claude Bernard University, Lyon 1 - Expert in pollution control systems and head of the Chemistry of Pollution Control Systems, Automotive Emissions Measurement and Fuels department for the PSA Group. - Lecturer at IFP School and ENSI Caen, France
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Karine PAJOT: PhD in Air Pollution Chemistry and Environmental Physics from Paris Diderot University, Paris 7 - Research engineer for the PSA Group - Lecturer at IFP School and INSA Centre Val de Loire, France
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Pierre MACAUDIERE: PhD in Analytical Chemistry from Pierre et Marie Curie University, Paris 6 - Master Expert in Pollution Control Systems and Fuels for the PSA Group, France
INTRODUCTION
Climate change and air quality are the two major challenges we face. In both cases, the transport sector, and the automotive sector in particular, is involved: on the one hand, it emits significant quantities of greenhouse gases (CO 2 , CH 4 , etc.) and on the other, it is one of the main sources of pollutants such as particulates but also and above all nitrogen oxides.
In the early 1990s, Europe decided to regulate emissions from the road transport sector. The first standard, called Euro 1 Euro x" standards were introduced in January 1993. Since then, the "Euro x" standards have continued to be tightened, leading automakers to reduce their vehicles' emissions of primary pollutants time and again. But while vehicle emissions and those from other sources have indeed been reduced, the results in terms of airborne concentrations are not always obvious:
fleet renewal, which takes time and does not immediately show the effectiveness of new pollution control technologies;
vehicle maintenance, which is not always provided by the customer;
the multiple and not always traceable origins of pollutants and their processes of evolution in the atmosphere, depending on geography, meteorology or even the topography of the areas under consideration (cf. "wide avenue" versus "canyon street" i.e. narrow street lined with tall buildings).
That said, it is clear that today's air quality directives are increasingly influencing the development of emissions standards, which in turn will influence the development of tomorrow's pollution control systems. For example, the issue of diesel particulates has been addressed since 2011 ( Euro 5 ) thanks to the introduction of particulate filters or the generalization since 2014 ( Euro 6.b ) of SCR (Selective Catalytic Reduction), highly effective in reducing NOx emissions from diesel vehicles.
The aim of this publication is to draw a link between the changes in air quality in recent years, as described in detail at
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KEYWORDS
catalyst | automotive after-treatment system | WLTC | RDE
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Bibliography
Websites
Ministère de la Transition écologique et solidaire :
Green Deal – European Commission:
Regulations
EU, 2004, Directive 2004/107/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 December 2004 relating to arsenic, cadmium, mercury, nickel and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in ambient air (OJ L 23, 26.1.2005, pp. 3-16) ( https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/ dir/2004/107/oj ).
EU, 2008, Directive...
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