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Comment 3 for Technology and Fuels Assessment (techfuel-ws) - 1st Workshop.
First Name: Joseph
Last Name: Kubsh
Email Address: jkubsh@meca.org
Affiliation: MECA
Subject: Alternative Fuels
Comment:
In the discussion of alternative transportation fuels, ARB staff rightly draws attention to the issue of well-to-wheels methane leakage associated with the use of natural gas fueled vehicles and engines. In addition to this methane leakage issue, ARB-sponsored work with West Virginia University has also recently reported that two high mileage stoichiometric, natural gas bus engines emitted ultrafine particulates that were associated with lubricant consumption in these engines. The PM composition of these buses correlated with oil-derived elemental species. Chemical speciation showed that lube oil-based additives and wear metals were a major fraction of the PM from these buses. The composition of the PM contained oil-derived (Ca, Mg, Zn, P) and engine-wear (Fe, Cu, Al) metals. Detectable levels of K and Mn were also found. The mass-based, lube oil-derived metal emissions were an order of magnitude higher than those from DPF-equipped diesel engines. Although the two buses operated well within the U.S. EPA 2010 standards for PM and NOx, the study does indicate the possibility of PM emissions from natural gas engines to increase due to deterioration and increased lube oil consumption. This study suggests that, although the PM mass emissions from natural gas vehicles are low, the presence of nucleation mode solid metal particles could pose significant health risks in the alveolar regions of the respiratory system due to the higher surface area of these nanoparticles. The complete reference of the published report is: A. Thiruvengadam, et al., “Characterization of Particulate Matter Emissions from a Current Technology Natural Gas Engine,” Environmental Science & Technology, DOI: 10.1021/es5005973, June 30, 2014, pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es5005973. Lubricant consumption in DME-fueled engines would also be expected to generate ultrafine particles that would likely contain similar solid metal particles to those observed on these stoichiometric, natural gas bus engines. Exhaust filter technology similar to DPFs could be applied to stoichiometric, natural gas engines or engines fueled by DME that would largely eliminate these ultrafine particulate emissions. If natural gas or DME-fueled engines are to become significant actors in the transportation sector, the issue of their ultrafine particulate emissions must be dealt with through the application of exhaust filters. Policies such as controlling ultrafine particulate emissions through the use of a particulate number emission limit for mobile source engines would provide ARB with a mechanism for ensuring that these alternatively fueled engines do not create a potentially significant health risk for the state of California.
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Date and Time Comment Was Submitted: 2014-09-21 08:00:27
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