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MOBILE 6 Input Requirements and the NONROAD MODEL-2002

MOBILE 6 Input Requirements and the NONROAD MODEL-2002. Dale Aspy Region 4. Overview. Introduce the range of commands except output commands Demonstrate that MOBILE6 is flexible Local data encouraged, default data provided. Input Guidance.

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MOBILE 6 Input Requirements and the NONROAD MODEL-2002

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  1. MOBILE 6 Input Requirements and the NONROAD MODEL-2002 Dale Aspy Region 4

  2. Overview Introduce the range of commands except output commands Demonstrate that MOBILE6 is flexible Local data encouraged, default data provided

  3. Input Guidance • Current M6 User Guide contains no guidance on appropriate input assumptions • Chap. 5 contains useful information for converting M5 input assumptions to M6 • Guidance has been issued • Most new input options are for special cases • Some will require new data in the long run, but we will provide interim options such as national defaults that can be used near-term.

  4. Required Commands • MOBILE6 INPUT FILE • MOBILE6 BATCH FILE is alternative • RUN DATA • marks beginning of run section • MIN/MAX TEMPERATURE • HOURLY TEMPERATURE is alternative • can be in run or scenario sections • FUEL RVP • can be in run or scenario sections • SCENARIO RECORD • labels and marks start of new scenario • CALENDAR YEAR • specifies calendar year of scenario • END OF RUN • separate multiple runs in input files

  5. Simplest Input File Example MOBILE6 INPUT FILE : RUN DATA MIN/MAX TEMP : 64. 92. FUEL RVP : 7.0 SCENARIO REC : Scenario Title Text CALENDAR YEAR : 2010 END OF RUN

  6. Header Commands • POLLUTANTS • specifies which pollutants (HC, CO, NOx) are included in output file • default is all three • REPORT FILE • allows user to specify a name for an output file in descriptive format • default is name of input file with extension “.TXT” • DATABASE OUTPUT • directs MOBILE6 to produce database output • default is descriptive output • will be covered elsewhere

  7. Header Commands Example MOBILE6 INPUT FILE : POLLUTANTS : HC NOX REPORT FILE : filename.txt RUN DATA MIN/MAX TEMP : 64. 92. FUEL RVP : 7.0 SCENARIO REC : No CO CALENDAR YEAR : 2010 END OF RUN

  8. Temperature • A required input, with two options • Affects temperature corrections to exhaust and evap emissions and temperature of dispensed fuel for refueling emissions • MIN/MAX TEMP • User supplies minimum and maximum daily ambient temperature • Model creates daily temp profile with low at 6 am and high at 3 pm • Local data can be obtained from National Climatic Data Center • Preferred choice for most modeling • HOURLY TEMP • User supplies 24 hourly temperatures • Optional for most applications

  9. ABSOLUTE HUMIDITY • Used to determine A/C usage • Much more important than in MOBILE5 • Guidance • Users should supply local data • Local data (relative humidity) can be obtained from National Climatic Data Center • Will supply information on conversion from relative humidity to absolute

  10. Other Weather Conditions • These also affect A/C usage • Defaults for all are worst case conditions • Guidance • Optional for most applications • Commands: • CLOUD COVER • PEAK SUN • SUNRISE/SUNSET

  11. Evaluation Year and Month • Must be in Scenario section • CALENDAR YEAR • Required command • EVALUATION MONTH • January (“1”) or July (“7”) • Default is January • Only affects fleet composition and RFG program • No effect on temperature, RVP, etc. • Other months can be estimated by interpolation between January and July runs

  12. External Conditions Example MOBILE6 INPUT FILE : RUN DATA MIN/MAX TEMP : 64. 92. ABSOLUTE HUMIDITY : 115.0 FUEL RVP : 7.0 SCENARIO REC : It’s not the heat... CALENDAR YEAR : 2010 EVALUATION MONTH : 7 ALTITUDE : 2 END OF RUN

  13. Fleet Characteristics • Commands that identify characteristics of the vehicle fleet such as vehicle age, power source, and activity level • 2 fuel types – gas and diesel • Natural gas handled separately • 16 vehicle types • 25 ages within each type

  14. New Vehicle Types • MOBILE6 vehicle types more closely match classification used for vehicle standards than MOBILE5

  15. New Vehicle Types

  16. Fleet Guidance • Areas are unlikely to have local data for all new vehicle types • Should use the local data they do have to account for MOBILE5 vehicle types • Can use national defaults for new vehicle types • We will work with DOT and others to develop new methods for local data

  17. Age Distribution • EPA recommends use of local data • Determines the fleet turnover rate • Wide local variation • Command is REG DIST • Data usually come from registration lists • Must be in Run section • Requires an external data file • File consists of registration fractions for each of 25 ages, representing the fraction of vehicles of that age in July • Can enter any of 16 vehicle types (combined gas and diesel)

  18. Age Distribution • Chapter 5 of User Guide provides a method for applying MOBILE5 registration distributions to new MOBILE6 sub-classes • Assumes no differences among sub-classes • A reasonable approach until we have local data • VIN decoders could help with new LDT classes • New HDV classes are a more difficult problem

  19. Diesel Fractions • Allows user to specify fraction of diesel vehicles for 14 vehicle types • Urban/transit buses are 100% diesel • Motorcycles are 100% gas • Not an important local input • Local variation smaller than age distribution • Command is DIESEL FRACTIONS • Can be in Run or Scenario sections • If selected, user must supply fractions for every age in every class = 350 separate fractions

  20. Annual Mileage Accumulation • Annual mileage accumulation rate varies by vehicle age and vehicle class • EPA recommends use of national default data in MOBILE6 • Difficult to develop accurate local data • Command is MILE ACCUM RATE • Must be in Run Section • User enters rates by age • Not all vehicle classes are required • External data file required

  21. Natural Gas Vehicle Fractions • Allows user to specify fraction of natural gas vehicles by model year and vehicle class • Not necessary for most applications • Default is zero • Command is NGV FRACTION • Must be in Run section • External data file required • User must enter NGV fractions for each vehicle type and model year from 1994 through 2050

  22. Fleet Characteristics Example MOBILE6 INPUT FILE : RUN DATA MIN/MAX TEMP : 64. 92. FUEL RVP : 7.0 REG DIST : REGDATA.D SCENARIO REC : Alternate reg. dist. CALENDAR YEAR : 2010 EVALUATION MONTH : 7 ALTITUDE : 2 END OF RUN

  23. Activity Commands • Allow users to allocate vehicle travel by vehicle class, time of day, day of week, type of road, speed, etc. • Many new options add flexibility for meso- and microscale analysis • Most would not be required for typical SIP or conformity submission

  24. VMT Fractions • MOBILE6 produces both separate emissions factors for each vehicle class as well as aggregate emissions by groupings (all vehicles, HDDV, etc.) • This command allows users to specify how MOBILE allocates VMT by vehicle type to calculate aggregate emissions • EPA expects that states and MPOs would use local data for VMT fractions • Command is VMT FRACTIONS • Can be in Run or Scenario sections • User must enter fractions for 16 vehicle types

  25. VMT Fractions • Chapter 5 of User Guide provides a method for applying MOBILE5 VMT fractions to new MOBILE6 sub-classes • Method uses default national data for each vehicle type by model year to allocate local data to MOBILE6 sub-classes • A reasonable approach in the near term • What are long-term prospects for new data? • More detailed counts? • Use of registration data?

  26. VMT Fractions Example MOBILE6 INPUT FILE : RUN DATA MIN/MAX TEMP : 64. 92. FUEL RVP : 7.0 REG DIST : REGDATA.D VMT FRACTIONS : 0.354 0.089 0.297 0.092 0.041 0.040 0.004 0.003 0.002 0.008 0.010 0.012 0.040 0.002 0.001 0.005 SCENARIO REC : Alternate VMT fractions CALENDAR YEAR : 2010 EVALUATION MONTH : 7 ALTITUDE : 2 END OF RUN

  27. VMT BY HOUR • Allows users to allocate the fraction of VMT that occurs at each hour of the day • Encourage areas to use this, especially if results will be used for photochemical modeling • If hourly activity is not known but peak vs. off-peak activity is, allocate peak activity to peak hours and vice versa • Command requires input of 24 VMT fractions

  28. VMT BY FACILITY • Allows users to allocate VMT to roadway types by vehicle class • Encourage states and MPOs to use this • Default assumes the same distribution for all vehicle classes • Command requires external data file • File includes VMT distribution across 4 roadway types for each of 24 hours for each vehicle class the user chooses

  29. VMT BY FACILITY • Full use of this command will be difficult due to lack of data • Guidance • Need to develop methodology for getting from current data what’s needed for MOBILE6 • If hourly activity is not known but peak vs. off-peak activity is, allocate peak activity to peak hours and vice versa • For link-based modeling of one particular facility type, VMT BY FACILITY can be set to 100% of that type for each hour of the day

  30. Comparison of VMT BY HOUR and VMT BY FACILITY • Difference from VMT BY FACILITY (example): • VMT BY FACILITY estimate for 9 am • 40% of LDV VMT is on freeways • 30% is on arterials • 20% is on local streets • 10% is on ramps • Distribution varies by hour and vehicle class • VMT BY HOUR • 10% of total daily fleet VMT occurs at 9 am • 9% of VMT occurs at 10 am, etc.

  31. Speeds • In MOBILE5, users entered average speeds • In MOBILE6, users can enter a speed distribution • Allows users to enter the data behind the average speed • Example - modeling an area with 3 roads and 3 speeds • In MOBILE5, do three runs, one at each speed, and calculate weighted average of results • In MOBILE6, do one run with distribution of VMT at each speed

  32. Speeds • Can run MOBILE6 for a single speed by creating a run distribution with only one or two values • Can now run a MOBILE5 type average speed in the latest release of MOBILE6 • Chapter 5 provides more information on the conversion of MOBILE5 input to MOBILE6 • Guidance • Areas should use local speed distributions • Command is SPEED VMT • Requires external data file • File contains VMT fractions in 14 speed bins for each hour of day

  33. Operating Modes • MOBILE5 allowed user input of percent of VMT in hot and cold start modes • MOBILE6 uses number of engine starts and soak duration distributions to control effects of engine starts • Guidance • not necessary for many applications

  34. Operating Modes • Chapter 5 of User Guide gives details of conversion from MOBILE5 to MOBILE6 input • Two commands • STARTS PER DAY • must be in Run section • estimate of number of trips • requires 56 values - one weekday and one weekend average number of starts for each of 28 vehicle types • SOAK DISTRIBUTION • must be in Scenario section • measure of time engine is not running • requires 3,360 values - 70 soak durations for each hour of day

  35. Additional Activity Commands • START DIST • Allocates engine starts by hour of the day • Requires 48 values - percentage of starts for each hour for weekdays and weekends • HOT SOAK ACTIVITY • Specifies a hot soak duration distribution • Evap emissions that occur after a hot vehicle has shut down • Distribution is number of vehicles with a hot soak of 1-60 minutes, by minute, for each hour of the day • Day is broken up into 14 time periods (night hours are lumped together)

  36. Additional Activity Commands • DIURN SOAK ACTIVITY • Specifies a diurnal soak time distribution • Evap emissions that occur when a vehicle is parked longer than 1 hour to a max of 72 hours • Distribution of the length of time vehicles have been soaking for each hour of day • Day is broken up into 18 periods (night hours are lumped together)

  37. Additional Activity Commands • Weekday and weekend trip length distributions • Specifies fraction of VMT that occurs during trips of different durations • Affects running loss evap emissions • Requires distribution of trip lengths (6 ranges) for 14 hours • WE DA TRI LEN DI does weekday distributions • WE EN TRI LEN DI does weekend distributions • Use weekend vehicle activity • Directs MOBILE6 to apply weekend activity information • Default is weekday activity • Command is WE VEH US

  38. Additional Activity Commands • Guidance • Activity commands increase flexibility of MOBILE6 • Better able to do meso- and microscale modeling • Encourage areas to develop data over the long term that improves accuracy of emissions modeling • Areas should use commands if they have the data • Use of these commands is not required if the data are not available

  39. Fuel Commands • Allow users to model impacts of various gasoline fuel parameters

  40. FUEL RVP • A required input that affects both exhaust and evap emissions • Can be based on mandated limits or on survey data as described in previous guidance • OXYGENATED FUELS and FUEL PROGRAM commands may affect FUEL RVP input

  41. FUEL PROGRAM • Allows users to specify fuel program • Options • Conventional Gas East (“1”) • Default setting • Post-1999 sulfur levels for most of country • Conventional Gas West (“3”) • Post-1999 sulfur levels in five western states • Reformulated Gas (“2 N” or “2 S”) • Effects of RFG program (1995+) • User must specify north or south region • Overrides RVP • User-Supplied Gasoline Sulfur Levels (“4”) • Specifies post-1999 average and maximum sulfur levels

  42. Gasoline Sulfur Content • Allows users to specify gasoline sulfur content for calendar years through 1999 • Default is 300 ppm • Guidance will need to define acceptable sources of data • Command is SULFUR CONTENT • Must be in Scenario section • Enter sulfur values between 30 and 600 ppm

  43. OXYGENATED FUELS • Allows users to model an oxy fuels program • Users enter: • Market shares of ether and alcohol blends • Average oxygen content of ether and alcohol blends • Whether a RVP waiver has been granted to allow splash blending of alcohol-based oxygenates

  44. SEASON • Identifies season for the RFG calculation • Summer (“1”) • Winter (“2”) • Default: • Season is based on EVALUATION MONTH • SEASON flag allows winter RFG in July • Only needed if RFG is specified and user needs to interpolate results to an intermediate month

  45. Stage II Programs • Allows users to model impact of Stage II vapor recovery system requirement on refueling emissions • Stage II reductions depend on efficiency of the program, whether or not vehicles have onboard vapor recovery systems, fuel RVP, and fuel temperature • Command is STAGE II REFUELING • Must be in the Run section • User must input program start year, number of phase-in years, and efficiency of the program on light and heavy duty vehicles

  46. Fuel Commands Example MOBILE6 INPUT FILE : RUN DATA MIN/MAX TEMP : 64. 92. FUEL RVP : 7.0 FUEL PROGRAM : 2 S STAGE II REFUELING : 89 4 80. 60. SCENARIO REC : southern RFG + Stage II CALENDAR YEAR : 2000 EVALUATION MONTH : 7 END OF RUN

  47. NO CLEAN AIR ACT • Allows users to model vehicle emissions as if the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 had not been implemented • Needed for Rate of Progress calculations • Disables: • All exhaust standards after Tier 0 • Enhanced evap test benefits • SFTP • OBD, I/M240, and ASM benefits • Detergent additives • Fuel sulfur levels lower than 300 ppm • Cold CO benefits

  48. Modified Output Formats • Eliminate most existing options • Descriptive (120 column) output • Electronic (tab delimited) “database”output

  49. File Run Scenario Vehicle Type Pollutant Hour Age Facility (Roadway) Type Emission Type Grams per mile Grams per hour Starts Ends Miles Miles per Gallon Hourly VMT fraction Facility VMT fraction Registration Distribution Vehicle Count Ambient Temperature Diurnal Temperature Database Output Fields

  50. Key Points • MOBILE6 provides much flexibility, can do area wide emissions down to a particular project. • Local data is suggested when available. • Default data provided, based on national trends.

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