posted on 2018-10-16, 00:00authored byCheng Huang, Qingyao Hu, Yingjie Li, Junjie Tian, Yingge Ma, Yunliang Zhao, Jialiang Feng, Jingyu An, Liping Qiao, Hongli Wang, Sheng’ao Jing, Dandan Huang, Shengrong Lou, Min Zhou, Shuhui Zhu, Shikang Tao, Li Li
Intermediate
volatility organic compound (IVOC) emissions from
a large cargo vessel were characterized under real-world operating
conditions using an on-board measurement system. Test ship fuel-based
emission factors (EFs) of total IVOCs were determined for two fuel
types and seven operating conditions. The average total IVOC EF was
1003 ± 581 mg·kg-fuel–1, approximately
0.76 and 0.29 times the EFs of primary organic aerosol (POA) emissions
from low-sulfur fuel (LSF, 0.38 wt % S) and high-sulfur fuel (HSF,
1.12 wt % S), respectively. The average total IVOC EF from LSF was
2.4 times that from HSF. The average IVOC EF under low engine load
(15%) was 0.5–1.6 times higher than those under 36%–74%
loads. An unresolved complex mixture (UCM) contributed 86.1 ±
1.9% of the total IVOC emissions. Ship secondary organic aerosol (SOA)
production was estimated to be 546.5 ± 284.1 mg·kg-fuel–1; IVOCs contributed 98.9 ± 0.9% of the produced
SOA on average. Fuel type was the dominant determinant of ship IVOC
emissions, IVOC volatility distributions, and SOA production. The
ship emitted more IVOC mass, produced higher proportions of volatile
organic components, and produced more SOA mass when fueled with LSF
than when fueled with HSF. When reducing ship POA emissions, more
attention should be paid to commensurate control of ship SOA formation
potential.