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Inhalation Toxicology
International Forum for Respiratory Research
Volume 20, 2008 - Issue 13
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Research Article

Generation and Characterization of Gasoline Engine Exhaust Inhalation Exposure Atmospheres

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Pages 1157-1168 | Received 02 Jun 2008, Accepted 03 Sep 2008, Published online: 02 Dec 2008
 

Abstract

Exposure atmospheres for a rodent inhalation toxicology study were generated from the exhaust of a 4.3-L gasoline engine coupled to a dynamometer and operated on an adapted California Unified Driving Cycle. Exposure levels were maintained at three different dilution rates. One chamber at the lowest dilution had particles removed by filtration. Each exposure atmosphere was characterized for particle mass, particle number, particle size distribution, and detailed chemical speciation. The majority of the mass in the exposure atmospheres was gaseous carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, and volatile organics, with small amounts of particle-bound carbon/ions and metals. The atmospheres varied according to the cycle, with the largest spikes in volatile organic and inorganic species shown during the “cold start” portion of the cycle. Ammonia present from the exhaust and rodents interacted with the gasoline exhaust to form secondary inorganic particles, and an increase in exhaust resulted in higher proportions of secondary inorganics as a portion of the total particle mass. Particle size had a median of 10–20 nm by number and approximately 150 nm by mass. Volatile organics matched the composition of the fuel, with large proportions of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons coupled to low amounts of oxygenated organics. A new measurement technique revealed organics reacting with nitrogen oxides have likely resulted in measurement bias in previous studies of combustion emissions. Identified and measured particle organic species accounted for about 10% of total organic particle mass and were mostly aliphatic acids and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.

This work was supported by the National Environmental Respiratory Center, which was funded by numerous industry, state, and federal sponsors, including the US Environmental Protection Agency, US Department of Energy (Office of Freedom Car and Vehicle Technologies), and US Department of Transportation. This manuscript does not represent the views or policies of any sponsor. Programming of engine cycle was performed by Dyne Systems, Inc. The exposure system was operated and data were collected by Mark Gauna, Mitchell Irvin, and Domonic Lees. Metals analyses were conducted by the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene.

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