Despite being hailed as a green fuel, emissions from diesel engines including particulate
matter (PM10 and PM 2.5) have been implicated in a range of adverse human health
effects from lung and bladder cancers to premature mortality. In this study diesel engine
exhaust emissions were collected from a light duty direct injection diesel engine on a
standard test bed. Engine conditions of speed and load were altered to provide a set of
total emission samples from over the engine's operating range. Diesel emission samples
collected were fractionated on a silica column into aliphatic, aromatic, and polar groups of
compounds, which were tested for their genotoxicity in the chromosome aberration assay
in Chinese hamster ovary CHO-K1 cells both with and without metabolic activation (rat
liver S9 fraction).
The aliphatic fractions did not exhibit cytotoxicity up to the maximum
concentration assayed, and one emission sample (3000 rpm speed and 5 Nm load) assayed
for effect on chromosome aberrations was not clastogenic (up to 600 µg/ml). The aromatic
fractions of all engine emission samples assayed and of the fuel were not clastogenic, but
did show high levels of cytotoxicity at relatively low doses, raising concern that any
genotoxic effect was masked by the toxicity of certain chemicals within the fraction.
Further fractionation, using HPLC, was therefore performed which separated the aromatics
into various ring sizes. Assay of the ring fractions showed evidence of increasing
clastogenicity with increasing ring size, with the 3+ -ring fractions of both the fuel and one
emission sample clearly clastogenic when assayed with metabolic activation (evidence of
the presence of indirect-acting genotoxic compounds within both samples).
The final fractions to be assayed, the polar fractions, were clastogenic when
assayed both with and without metabolic activation. All seven fractions from emission
samples collected over a range of speed and load conditions caused highly significant
increases in chromosome aberrations at concentrations as low as 20 µg/ml. An engine
running for less than 30 minutes at 1000 rpm speed and 55 Nm load (urban driving
conditions for a heavily laden vehicle) would emit 148 mg of polar group compounds for
every litre of fuel consumed. Polar compounds have been shown to be a highly mutagenic
fraction of air particulate samples, and as diesel emissions contribute up to 80 % of the
particulate matter in urban air in some areas, diesel emissions and the polar compounds in
particular are of real concern to human health.
Date of Award | 1999 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Diesel engine exhaust emission fractions: clastogenic effects in vitro
Whittington, R. A. (Author). 1999
Student thesis: PhD