Study of Brake Wear Particle Emissions: Impact of Braking and Cruising Conditions

Environ Sci Technol. 2019 May 7;53(9):5143-5150. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.8b07142. Epub 2019 Apr 12.

Abstract

A novel measurement setup is designed, constructed, and validated by theoretical simulations and by experiments enabling sensitive and loss-free brake particle emission investigations. With the goal to simulate realistic driving, a 3 h subsection of the Los Angeles City Traffic (LACT) cycle is selected as test cycle. The tests are performed with the front brake of a midsize passenger vehicle under both static laboratory and more dynamic realistic conditions that include parasitic drag and vehicle brake temperatures (advanced vehicle simulations). A PM10 emission factor of around 4.6 mg km-1 brake-1 is determined. During five cycle runs the emission factor in terms of particle number decreases by 1 order of magnitude. This decrease is accompanied by a shift of the critical brake temperature Tcrit, at which ultrafine particle emissions occur, from 140 to 170 °C. Investigations with advanced vehicle simulations generate brake temperatures below Tcrit and consequently do not show ultrafine particle emissions above background level. A particle number emission factor of approximately 4.9 × 1010 km-1 brake-1 is estimated for realistic vehicle brake temperatures. Particle formation during cruising is clearly identified. The brake drag is estimated to contribute about 34% to the total airborne particle mass emission.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Air Pollutants*
  • Cities
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Los Angeles
  • Particle Size
  • Vehicle Emissions*

Substances

  • Air Pollutants
  • Vehicle Emissions