2 resultados para petrol sniffing
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Origin and patterns of distribution of trace elements in street dust. Unleaded petrol and urban lead
Resumo:
The elemental composition, patterns of distribution and possible sources of street dust are not common to all urban environments, but vary according to the peculiarities of each city. The common features and dissimilarities in the origin and nature of street dust were investigated through a series of studies in two widely different cities, Madrid (Spain) and Oslo (Norway), between 1990 and 1994. The most comprehensive sampling campaign was carried out in the Norwegian capital during the summer of 1994. An area of 14 km2, covering most of downtown Oslo and some residential districts to the north of the city, was divided into 1 km2 mapping units, and 16 sampling increments of approximately 150 g were collected from streets and roads in each of them. The fraction below 100 μm was acid-digested and analysed by ICP-MS. Statistical analyses of the results suggest that chemical elements in street dust can be classified into three groups: “urban” elements (Ba, Cd, Co, Cu, Mg, Pb, Sb, Ti, Zn), “natural” elements (Al, Ga, La, Mn, Na, Sr, Th, Y) and elements of a mixed origin or which have undergone geochemical changes from their original sources (Ca, Cs, Fe, Mo, Ni, Rb, Sr, U). Soil resuspension and/or mobilisation appears to be the most important source of “natural” elements, while “urban” elements originate primarily from traffic and from the weathering and corrosion of building materials. The data for Pb seem to prove that the gradual shift from leaded to unleaded petrol as fuel for automobiles has resulted in an almost proportional reduction in the concentration of Pb in dust particles under 100 μm. This fact and the spatial distribution of Pb in the city strongly suggest that lead sources other than traffic (i.e. lead accumulated in urban soil over the years) may contribute as much lead, if not more, to urban street dust.
Resumo:
En este proyecto se va desarrollar una aplicación distribuida para la diagnosis y monitorización de automóviles. Se pretende poder realizar estas funciones en prácticamente cualquier automóvil del mercado (con fabricación a partir del año 1996 para el caso de automóviles gasolina y para el año 2000 en el caso de automóviles diésel) de manera remota, aprovechando la conectividad a Internet que actualmente brindan la mayoría de los smartphones. La viabilidad del proyecto reside en la existencia de estándares para la diagnosis de la electrónica del motor. Para poder llevar a cabo esta tarea, se empleará una interfaz de diagnóstico ELM327 bluetooth, que servirá de enlace entre el vehículo y el teléfono móvil del usuario y que a su vez se encargara de enviar los datos que reciba del vehículo a un terminal remoto. De esta manera, se tendrá la aplicación dividida en dos partes: por un lado la aplicación que se ejecuta en el terminal móvil del usuario que actuará como parte servidora, y por el otro la aplicación cliente que se ejecutará en un terminal remoto. También estará disponible una versión de la aplicación servidora para PC. El potencial del proyecto reside en la capacidad de visualización en tiempo real de los parámetros más importantes del motor del vehículo y en la detección de averías gracias a la funcionalidad de lectura de la memoria de averías residente en el vehículo. Así mismo, otras funcionalidades podrían ser implementadas en posteriores versiones de la aplicación, como podría ser el registro de dichos parámetros en una base de datos para su posterior procesado estadístico; de este modo se podría saber el consumo medio, la velocidad media, velocidad máxima alcanzada, tiempo de uso, kilometraje diario o mensual… y un sin fin de posibilidades. ABSTRACT. In this project a distributed application for car monitor and diagnostic is going to be developed. The idea is to be able to connect remotely to almost any car (with production starting in 1996 in the case of petrol engines and production starting in 2000 in case of diesel engines) using the Internet connection available in almost every smartphone. The project is viable because of the existence of standards for engine electronic unit connection. In order to do that, an ELM327 bluetooth interface is going to be used. This interface works as a link between the car and the smartphone, and it is the smartphone which sends the received data from the car to a remote terminal (computer). Thus, the application is divided into two parts: the server which is running on smartphone and the client which is running on a remote terminal. Also there is available a server application for PC. The potential of the project lies in the real-time display data capacity of the most important engine parameters and in the diagnostic capacity based on reading fault memory. In addition, other features could be implemented in later versions of the application, as the capacity of record data for future statistic analysis. By doing this, it is possible to know the average fuel consumption, average speed, maximum speed, time of use, daily or monthly mileage… and an endless number of possibilities.