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Technical Paper

High-Pressure Injection Fuel System Wear Study

1998-02-23
980869
The critical particle size for a high-pressure injection system was determined. Various double-cut test dusts ranging from 0 to 5 μm to 10 to 20 μm were evaluated to determine which test dust caused the high-pressure system to fail. With the exception of the 0- to 5-μm test dust, all test dust ranges caused failure in the high-pressure injection system. Analysis of these evaluations revealed that the critical particle size, in initiating significant abrasive wear, is 6 to 7 μm. Wear curve formulas were generated for each evaluation. A formula was derived that allows the user to determine if the fuel filter effluent will cause harmful damage to the fuel system based on the number of 5-, 10-, and 15-μm particles per milliliter present. A methodology was developed to evaluate fuel filter performance as related to engine operating conditions. The abrasive methodology can evaluate online filter efficiency and associated wear in a high-pressure injection system.
Technical Paper

Wicking Fiber Chemisorption for Air Quality Improvement

1997-02-24
970555
The removal of toxic, corrosive, irritant, and odorous gases is a key strategy in improving air quality in any closed space. The technologies of granulated activated carbon or chemically impregnated dry media are commonly employed to address this issue. Both of these methods have their limitations in manufacturability, volume of space, and/or pressure drop associated with use in a given application. A new air quality technology has been developed which integrates liquid based chemisorption gas treatment with a shaped fiber media carrier. The patented wicking fiber shape holds more than its own weight in active reagents within intra-fiber channels. While the liquid volume is captured and retained through capillary action, a large surface area of the chemisorptive liquid is presented to the air flow for reaction and neutralization of the target contaminant gases. The wicking fibers may be implemented as fiber bundles, woven materials, or as non-wovens.
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