The Development of a Real-Time Evaporative Emissions Test 901110
In recent years various parties have proposed new evaporative emission test procedures focused on controlling “excess” evaporative emissions, on hot “ozone prone” days. Studies by General Motors established the need for real-time measurements of daily emissions from parked vehicles and of “running losses” from vehicles that are driven to quantify and control the mobile source contribution to VOC inventory. “Resting losses” are shown to be a previously unidentified major source of hydrocarbon emissions. This paper describes the theories, data and development of GM's Real-Time Test Procedure.
Citation: Haskew, H., Cadman, W., and Liberty, T., "The Development of a Real-Time Evaporative Emissions Test," SAE Technical Paper 901110, 1990, https://doi.org/10.4271/901110. Download Citation
Author(s):
Harold M. Haskew, William R. Cadman, Thomas F. Liberty
Affiliated:
Powertrain Control Center Current Product Engineering General Motors Corporation
Pages: 25
Event:
Government/Industry Meeting
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
SAE Transactions Journal of Fuels and Lubricants-V99-4
Related Topics:
Environmental testing
Test procedures
Hydrocarbons
Emissions certification
Volatile organic compounds
Emissions
Logistics
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