Comparisons of emissions of transit buses using methanol and diesel fuel.

Author(s)
Santini, D.J. & Rajan, J.B.
Year
Abstract

The results of several studies on the emission characteristics of methanol- and diesel-fueled buses are summarised. To facilitate comparison, the emissions test data at idle and in various driving cycles are presented on an hourly or per-mile basis and are ordered by the speed of the test. The emissions of specific pollutants from methanol-fueled test vehicles varied greatly with average speed and depended on the engine technology and the emission control devices used. The results suggest that the most likely substitution of methanol-fueled buses for diesel-fueled buses is not likely to result in net air quality improvements for very low-speed bus operations in an urban environment. Under these conditions, the negative effects of increases in carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, and hydrocarbons may offset the positive effects of particulate emissions reduction. In this paper, there is no attempt to weight emissions, estimate air quality, or quantify net emissions effects.

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Publication

Library number
C 25870 (In: C 25860 S) IRRD 837675
Source

In: Energy and environment 1990 : transportation-induced noise and air pollution, Transportation Research Record TRR 1255, p. 108-118, 22 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.