Characteristics of Tire Wear Particles Generated by a Tire Simulator under Various Driving Conditions

被引:102
作者
Kim, Gibaek [1 ]
Lee, Seokhwan [1 ]
机构
[1] Korea Inst Machinery & Mat, Dept Engine Res, 156 Gajeongbuk Ro, Daejeon 34103, South Korea
关键词
POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC-HYDROCARBONS; RESUSPENDED ROAD DUST; PARTICULATE MATTER; ON-ROAD; ULTRAFINE PARTICLES; EMISSIONS; SIZE; PAVEMENT; DYNAMOMETER; TOXICITY;
D O I
10.1021/acs.est.8b03459
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Physicochemical properties of pure tire wear particles (TWPs) were investigated in a laboratory. A tire simulator installed in an enclosing chamber was employed to eliminate artifacts caused by interfering particles during the generation and measurement of TWPs. TWP particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10) was correlated with tire speed (r > 0.94) and load (r > 0.99). Their mass size distributions showed that TWP mode diameters ranged between 3 and 4 mu m (unimodal). Tire wear caused by slip events resulted in an increase in the number concentration (ca. 8.4 x 10(5) cm(-3)) of particles (mainly ultrafine particles (UFPs)) at low PM2.5 and PM10 values (1 and 2 mu g m(-3), respectively). During braking events, UFPs were emitted at an early stage, with an increase in number concentration (up to 1.1 X 10(7) cm(-3)); a high mass concentration (3.6 mg m(-3)) was observed at a later stage via the coagulation of early emitted UFPs and condensation. On the basis of morphology and elemental composition, TWPs generally had elongated (micrometer-scale) and round/irregular (submicrometer-scale) shapes and they were classified into C/Si-rich, heavy metal-containing, S-containing, and mineralcontaining particles. This study determined that TWP emissions can vary with changes in driving condition.
引用
收藏
页码:12153 / 12161
页数:9
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]   Tailpipe, resuspended road dust, and brake-wear emission factors from on-road vehicles [J].
Abu-Allaban, M ;
Gillies, JA ;
Gertler, AW ;
Clayton, R ;
Proffitt, D .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2003, 37 (37) :5283-5293
[2]  
Barlow T., 2014, BRIEFING PAPER NONEX, Vfirst
[3]   Global estimate of aerosol direct radiative forcing from satellite measurements [J].
Bellouin, N ;
Boucher, O ;
Haywood, J ;
Reddy, MS .
NATURE, 2005, 438 (7071) :1138-1141
[4]  
Boulter PG., 2005, A Review of emission factors and models for road vehicle non-exhaust particulate matter
[5]   GAS AND PARTICLE EMISSIONS FROM AUTOMOBILE TIRES IN LABORATORY AND FIELD STUDIES [J].
CADLE, SH ;
WILLIAMS, RL .
JOURNAL OF THE AIR POLLUTION CONTROL ASSOCIATION, 1978, 28 (05) :502-507
[6]   Tire-wear particles as a source of zinc to the environment [J].
Councell, TB ;
Duckenfield, KU ;
Landa, ER ;
Callender, E .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2004, 38 (15) :4206-4214
[7]   Traffic-generated emissions of ultrafine particles from pavement-tire interface [J].
Dahl, A ;
Gharibi, A ;
Swietlicki, E ;
Gudmundsson, A ;
Bohgard, M ;
Ljungman, A ;
Blomqvist, G ;
Gustafsson, M .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2006, 40 (07) :1314-1323
[8]   Loading estimates of lead, copper, cadmium, and zinc in urban runoff from specific sources [J].
Davis, AP ;
Shokouhian, M ;
Ni, SB .
CHEMOSPHERE, 2001, 44 (05) :997-1009
[9]   Investigation of ultra fine particulate matter emission of rubber tires [J].
Foitzik, Michael-Jan ;
Unrau, Hans-Joachim ;
Gauterin, Frank ;
Doernhoefer, Johannes ;
Koch, Thomas .
WEAR, 2018, 394 :87-95
[10]  
Grigoratos T., 2014, 26648 EUR