PEMS-on board and E3 Modeling: A Comparison between Real-World Measurement and Emissions Estimates from Construction Equipment
Author(s): |
Apif M. Hajji
Aisyah Larasati Michael P. Lewis Huang Yue |
---|---|
Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | Civil Engineering Dimension / Dimensi Teknik Sipil, 18 October 2019, n. 2, v. 21 |
Page(s): | 59-65 |
DOI: | 10.9744/ced.21.2.59-65 |
Abstract: |
Vehicles in construction industry are typically powered by diesel engines and are considered to be an off-road source of air pollution. Air pollutant emissions include nitrogen oxides (NOx), particulate matter (PM), hydrocarbons (HC), and carbon monoxide (CO). Any engine that combusts a nonrenewable carbonaceous fuel will have net emissions of carbon dioxide (CO₂). Economic-Energy-Environmental (E3) model, a statistical-modeled tool, is developed by combining a multiple linear regression (MLR) approach for modeling equipment productivity with the emissions calculation algorithm from Environment Protection Agency (EPA)’s NONROAD model. This paper compares emissions data between the field data to E3 model outputs, and determines the similarity of the two sources of fuel use data. It is expected the two data are not narrowly similar since the field data are for individual vehicles, while E3 results are based on NONROAD model, which was intended to estimate average fuel use for a fleet of Heavy-Duty Diesel (HDD) equipment. |
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data sheet - Reference-ID
10376807 - Published on:
19/10/2019 - Last updated on:
19/10/2019