The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving

To accurately estimate the effect of driving conditions on vehicle emissions, an on-road light-duty vehicle emission platform was established based on OEM-2100TM, and each second data of mass emission rate corresponding to the driving conditions were obtained through an on-road test. The mass emissi...

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Main Authors: Dong Guo, Jinbao Zhao, Yi Xu, Feng Sun, Kai Li, Juan Wang, Yuhang Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University 2020-09-01
Series:Transport
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/Transport/article/view/12168
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spelling doaj-397f72a0b6784760999ee23443f4cd782021-07-02T19:47:36ZengVilnius Gediminas Technical UniversityTransport1648-41421648-34802020-09-0135437938810.3846/transport.2020.1216812168The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world drivingDong Guo0Jinbao Zhao1Yi Xu2Feng Sun3Kai Li4Juan Wang5Yuhang Sun6School of Transportation and Vehicle Engineering, Shandong University of Technology, ChinaSchool of Transportation and Vehicle Engineering, Shandong University of Technology, ChinaSchool of Transportation and Vehicle Engineering, Shandong University of Technology, ChinaSchool of Transportation and Vehicle Engineering, Shandong University of Technology, ChinaSchool of Transportation and Vehicle Engineering, Shandong University of Technology, ChinaSchool of Transportation and Vehicle Engineering, Shandong University of Technology, ChinaSchool of Transportation and Vehicle Engineering, Shandong University of Technology, ChinaTo accurately estimate the effect of driving conditions on vehicle emissions, an on-road light-duty vehicle emission platform was established based on OEM-2100TM, and each second data of mass emission rate corresponding to the driving conditions were obtained through an on-road test. The mass emission rate was closely related to the velocity and acceleration in real-world driving. This study shows that a high velocity and acceleration led to high real-world emissions. The vehicle emissions were the minimum when the velocity ranged from 30 to 50 km/h and the acceleration was less than 0.5 m/s2. Microscopic emission models were established based the on-road test, and single regression models were constructed based on velocity and acceleration separately. Binary regression and neural network models were established based on the joint distribution of velocity and acceleration. Comparative analysis of the accuracy of prediction and evaluation under different emission models, total error, second-based error, related coefficient, and sum of squared error were considered as evaluation indexes to validate different models. The results show that the three established emission models can be used to make relatively accurate prediction of vehicle emission on actual roads. The velocity regression model can be easily combined with traffic simulation models because of its simple parameters. However, the application of neural network model is limited by a complex coefficient matrix. First published online 19 March 2020https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/Transport/article/view/12168on-road emission testdriving conditionslight-duty vehiclevelocityaccelerationmass emission rate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dong Guo
Jinbao Zhao
Yi Xu
Feng Sun
Kai Li
Juan Wang
Yuhang Sun
spellingShingle Dong Guo
Jinbao Zhao
Yi Xu
Feng Sun
Kai Li
Juan Wang
Yuhang Sun
The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving
Transport
on-road emission test
driving conditions
light-duty vehicle
velocity
acceleration
mass emission rate
author_facet Dong Guo
Jinbao Zhao
Yi Xu
Feng Sun
Kai Li
Juan Wang
Yuhang Sun
author_sort Dong Guo
title The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving
title_short The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving
title_full The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving
title_fullStr The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving
title_full_unstemmed The impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving
title_sort impact of driving conditions on light-duty vehicle emissions in real-world driving
publisher Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
series Transport
issn 1648-4142
1648-3480
publishDate 2020-09-01
description To accurately estimate the effect of driving conditions on vehicle emissions, an on-road light-duty vehicle emission platform was established based on OEM-2100TM, and each second data of mass emission rate corresponding to the driving conditions were obtained through an on-road test. The mass emission rate was closely related to the velocity and acceleration in real-world driving. This study shows that a high velocity and acceleration led to high real-world emissions. The vehicle emissions were the minimum when the velocity ranged from 30 to 50 km/h and the acceleration was less than 0.5 m/s2. Microscopic emission models were established based the on-road test, and single regression models were constructed based on velocity and acceleration separately. Binary regression and neural network models were established based on the joint distribution of velocity and acceleration. Comparative analysis of the accuracy of prediction and evaluation under different emission models, total error, second-based error, related coefficient, and sum of squared error were considered as evaluation indexes to validate different models. The results show that the three established emission models can be used to make relatively accurate prediction of vehicle emission on actual roads. The velocity regression model can be easily combined with traffic simulation models because of its simple parameters. However, the application of neural network model is limited by a complex coefficient matrix. First published online 19 March 2020
topic on-road emission test
driving conditions
light-duty vehicle
velocity
acceleration
mass emission rate
url https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/Transport/article/view/12168
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