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Technical Paper

The Influences of Testing Conditions on DOC Light-Off Experiments

2023-04-11
2023-01-0372
Diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) is one of the critical catalyst components in modern diesel aftertreatment systems. It mainly converts unburned hydrocarbon (HC) and CO to CO2 and H2O before they are released to the environment. In addition, it also oxidizes a portion of NO to NO2, which improves the NOx conversion efficiency via fast SCR over the downstream selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalyst. HC light-off tests, with or without the presence of NOx, has been typically used for DOC evaluation in laboratory. In this work, we aim to understand the influences of DOC light-off experimental conditions, such as initial temperature, initial holding time, HC species, with or without the presence of NOx, on the DOC HC light-off behavior. The results indicate that light-off test with lower initial temperature and longer initial holding time (at its initial temperature) leads to higher DOC light-off temperature.
Technical Paper

Experimental and Modeling Study on the Thermal Aging Impact on the Performance of the Natural Gas Three-Way Catalyst

2023-04-11
2023-01-0375
The prediction accuracy of a three-way catalyst (TWC) model is highly associated with the ability of the model to incorporate the reaction kinetics of the emission process as a lambda function. In this study, we investigated the O2 and H2 concentration profiles of TWC reactions and used them as critical inputs for the development of a global TWC model. We presented the experimental data and global kinetic model showing the impact of thermal degradation on the performance of the TWC. The performance metrics investigated in this study included CH4, NOx, and CO conversions under lean, rich, and dithering light-off conditions to determine the kinetics of oxidation reactions and reduction/reforming/water-gas shift reactions as a function of thermal aging. The O2 and H2 concentrations were measured using mass spectrometry to track the change in the oxidation state of the catalyst and to determine the mechanism of the reactions under these light-off conditions.
Technical Paper

Finite Element Analysis based Investigation to Evaluate Sealing Capability of High-Pressure Fuel Line Joints in IC Engine

2021-09-22
2021-26-0364
For better fuel economy and reduced emissions; fuel system plays a very important role. There are some major challenges related to development of suitable fuel system due to high static (~2000 bar) and fluctuating pressures in high pressure (HP) fuel lines. This enforces to design leak proof joints as they directly affect engine operation and can cause customer inconvenience. It is also critical from safety standpoint. Sealing capability of a joint is generally evaluated by sealing pressure, length of the sealing width and retaining capability of joint preload over time. Theoretically, it is known that preload loss at a joint is a combination of several factors such as; thread pitch, nut stiffness and friction at threads. In our current work the cause of leakage in HP fuel line joints is explored. Using fish bone diagram for RCA (Root Cause Analysis), probable causes are narrowed down and design parameters responsible for preload loss are identified.
Technical Paper

Thermo-Mechanical Fatigue and Press-Fit Loss Analysis of Valve Seat Insert

2021-09-22
2021-26-0338
Valve seat inserts (VSI) are installed in cylinder heads to provide a seating surface for poppet valves. Insert material is more heat and wear resistant than the base cylinder head material and hence it makes them better suited for valve seating and improved engine durability. Also use of inserts permits easier repair or rebuild of cylinder heads as only the wear surfaces need to be replaced. Desirable performance characteristics are appropriate sealing, heat-transfer and minimizing valve’s seating face to VSI wear and undesired outputs include valve seat dropping and cracking. With the downsizing trend of diesel engines, it leads to increasing power density and therefore higher cylinder pressure and temperatures. Hence the engine components are getting exposed to more severe loadings and hence to damage modes, which were heretofore not experienced. Among such possible damage modes are insert’s yielding and corresponding press-fit loss leading to either it’s cracking or drop-out.
Technical Paper

Engine Mounted Oil Cooler 3D CFD CHT Analysis for Predicting Thermal Performance

2021-09-22
2021-26-0351
This paper describes steady state, computationally rigorous, three-dimensional conjugate heat transfer 3D CFD analysis of an oil cooler. Thermal performance of an oil cooler is very significant from engine oil consumption, bearings performance etc. In an engine water jacket, coolant flows around and through the oil cooler making the flow three dimensional. Therefore, demanding the need of a 3D CFD analysis for capturing all the flow and heat transfer aspects and thereby accurate prediction of thermal performance. An oil cooler contains intricate turbulators in flow paths and have dimensions varying from as small as 0.25 mm to as large as 350 mm, therefore making the meshing and solution a formidable task. In current work an oil cooler with all the intricate details is modelled in a commercial CFD code. Objective is to develop a solution approach which can predict thermal performance of an oil cooler in an accurate way.
Technical Paper

Optimal Energy Management Strategy for Energy Efficiency Improvement and Pollutant Emissions Mitigation in a Range-Extender Electric Vehicle

2021-09-05
2021-24-0103
The definition of the energy management strategy for a hybrid electric vehicle is a key element to ensure maximum energy efficiency. The ability to optimally manage the on-board energy sources, i.e., fuel and electricity, greatly affects the final energy consumption of hybrid powertrains. In the case of plug-in series-hybrid architectures, such as Range-Extender Electric Vehicles (REEVs), fuel efficiency optimization alone can result in a stressful operation of the range-extender engine with an excessively high number of start/stops. Nonetheless, reducing the number of start/stops can lead to long periods in which the engine is off, resulting in the after-treatment system temperature to drop and higher emissions to be produced at the next engine start.
Technical Paper

Multi-Dimensional Spark Ignition Model with Distributed Energy Input and Integrated Circuit Model

2021-04-06
2021-01-0405
A multi-dimensional model of the spark ignition process for SI engines was developed as a user defined function (UDF) integrated into the commercial engine simulation software CONVERGE™ CFD. For the present research, the model simulated spark plasma development in an inert flow environment without combustion. The UT model results were then compared with experiments. The UT CONVERGE CFD-based model includes an electrical circuit sub-model that couples the primary and secondary sides of an inductive ignition system to predict arc voltage and current, from which the transient delivered electrical energy to the gap can be determined. Experimentally measured values of the arc resistance and spark plug calorimeter measurements of the efficiency of electrical to thermal energy conversion in the gap were used to determine the thermal energy delivered to the gas in the spark gap for different pressures and gap distances.
Journal Article

Application of Dynamic Skip Fire for NOx and CO2 Emissions Reduction of Diesel Powertrains

2021-04-06
2021-01-0450
Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF®) has been shown to significantly reduce CO2 on gasoline engines and has been in mass production since 2018. Diesel Dynamic Skip Fire (dDSF™) builds upon the technology and extends it to diesel engine applications. dDSF is an advanced cylinder deactivation technology that allows the deactivation of any number of cylinders dynamically to deliver the requested torque while maintaining acceptable noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH) performance. NOx regulations are becoming progressively more stringent on light, medium and heavy-duty (HD) diesel engines. Meeting low NOx standards is becoming increasingly challenging, especially in lightly loaded operating conditions where maintaining ideal aftertreatment system efficiency is difficult. Most existing techniques to increase aftertreatment temperatures at low loads incur a fuel consumption penalty, which increases greenhouse gas emissions.
Technical Paper

Experimental Study of Impact of Ash and Soot on Tail Pipe Particle Number

2019-04-02
2019-01-0976
Tailpipe particle number (PN) emission limits for heavy-duty diesel engines have been introduced as part of the off-highway Stage V standards. To meet the required limits a diesel particulate filter (DPF) with high filtration efficiency is required. The DPF relies on formation of a soot cake layer on the channel walls to achieve this high filtration efficiency. Off highway Stage V certification cycles are significantly higher in temperature than their on-highway counterparts, leading to difficulty in creating and maintaining a soot cake in the DPF. Hence for these applications meeting particle number requirements is challenging. To meet the high filtration efficiency requirements the DPF will have to reduce mean pore size, pore standard deviation, and increase wall thickness, in turn increasing backpressure, which results in a fuel consumption penalty. Another option is to evaluate the impact of temperature stable ash accumulation on DPF filtration efficiency.
Journal Article

Cylinder Head Gasket Fretting Simulation for High Horse Power Engine

2019-01-09
2019-26-0305
The head gasket of an internal combustion engine acts as a critical seal between its cylinder block and heads. Typically, and ideally, a high horse power engine head gasket will be composed of elastomer fluid sealing elements in a carrier and combustion seal body composed of aluminum, brass, carbon steel, copper, nickel, and/or stainless steel etc. The head gaskets purpose is to seal high pressure combustion gases, coolant, and oil and to ensure no leakage of gases or fluids out of the block to head joint. Three major failure modes [1] for cylinder head gasket joint are; 1. Fluid or gas leakage due to low sealing pressure. 2. Head gasket (bead) cracking due to high gap alternation and 3. Gasket scrubbing/fretting due to pressure and temperature fluctuations causing relative movement in the joint. During engine operation, the head gasket design should be robust enough to prevent all failure modes and provide acceptable performance.
Technical Paper

Development of 80- and 100- Mile Work Day Cycles Representative of Commercial Pickup and Delivery Operation

2018-04-03
2018-01-1192
When developing and designing new technology for integrated vehicle systems deployment, standard cycles have long existed for chassis dynamometer testing and tuning of the powertrain. However, to this day with recent developments and advancements in plug-in hybrid and battery electric vehicle technology, no true “work day” cycles exist with which to tune and measure energy storage control and thermal management systems. To address these issues and in support of development of a range-extended pickup and delivery Class 6 commercial vehicle, researchers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in collaboration with Cummins analyzed 78,000 days of operational data captured from more than 260 vehicles operating across the United States to characterize the typical daily performance requirements associated with Class 6 commercial pickup and delivery operation.
Journal Article

Customer Usage Space Classification and Representative Duty Cycle Development Using K-Means Clustering

2017-03-28
2017-01-0204
Understanding customer usage space and its impact on engine, after treatment, and vehicle duty cycles poses challenges in terms of data noise, data variability and complex interrelations. Moreover, humans are only able to concurrently visualize at most 2 to 3 dimensions, limiting the number of engine parameters that can be considered. Previous studies in this field have been limited to understanding trends in data based on single duty cycle, comparatively short application period and time domain segmented clustering analysis. These techniques have been used to determine representative cycles for specific applications. In this paper, K-Means Clustering is used to classify customer usage space based on tens of dimensions, for multiple duty cycles, and over years of operation. The clusters are evaluated based on system, sub-system, and component-based metrics on a day based unsegmented engine parameter values.
Journal Article

Development of a Particulate Filter Model for the Prediction of Backpressure: Improved Momentum Balance and Entrance and Exit Effect Equations

2017-03-28
2017-01-0974
The development of a one-dimensional model for the prediction of backpressure across a gasoline or diesel particulate filter (PF) is presented. The model makes two innovations: Firstly, the term for momentum convection in the gas momentum balance equations includes the loss (or gain) of axial momentum in the direction perpendicular to the channels; neglecting this results in the momentum convection term being too large. Secondly, equations for the pressure change due to the abrupt contraction at the PF entrance and for abrupt expansion at the exit are derived which take into account the fact that the velocity profile across the channels is not flat; often workers have used equations appropriate for high Reynolds numbers which assume flat velocity profiles. The model has been calibrated/tested against cold flow data for more than one length of PF. The use of more than one length allows along-filter pressure losses to be separated from entrance and exit effects.
Technical Paper

Catalyst Sulfur Poisoning and Recovery Behaviors: Key for Designing Advanced Emission Control Systems

2017-01-10
2017-26-0133
Advanced emission control systems for diesel engines usually include a combination of Diesel Oxidation Catalyst (DOC), Diesel Particulate Filter (DPF), Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR), and Ammonia Slip Catalyst (ASC). The performance of these catalysts individually, and of the aftertreatment system overall, is negatively affected by the presence of oxides of sulfur, originating from fuel and lubricant. In this paper, we illustrated some key aspects of sulfur interactions with the most commonly used types of catalysts in advanced aftertreatment systems. In particular, DOC can oxidize SO2 to SO3, collectively referred to as SOx, and store these sulfur containing species. The key functions of a DOC, such as the ability to oxidize NO and HC, are degraded upon SOx poisoning. The impact of sulfur poisoning on the catalytic functions of a DPF is qualitatively similar to DOC.
Journal Article

Evaluation of Fuel-Borne Sodium Effects on a DOC-DPF-SCR Heavy-Duty Engine Emission Control System: Simulation of Full-Useful Life

2016-10-17
2016-01-2322
For renewable fuels to displace petroleum, they must be compatible with emissions control devices. Pure biodiesel contains up to 5 ppm Na + K and 5 ppm Ca + Mg metals, which have the potential to degrade diesel emissions control systems. This study aims to address these concerns, identify deactivation mechanisms, and determine if a lower limit is needed. Accelerated aging of a production exhaust system was conducted on an engine test stand over 1001 h using 20% biodiesel blended into ultra-low sulfur diesel (B20) doped with 14 ppm Na. This Na level is equivalent to exposure to Na at the uppermost expected B100 value in a B20 blend for the system full-useful life. During the study, NOx emissions exceeded the engine certification limit of 0.33 g/bhp-hr before the 435,000-mile requirement.
Journal Article

Reformate Exhaust Gas Recirculation (REGR) Effect on Particulate Matter (PM), Soot Oxidation and Three Way Catalyst (TWC) Performance in Gasoline Direct Injection (GDI) Engines

2015-09-01
2015-01-2019
Gasoline direct injection (GDI) engines have become very attractive in transportation due to several benefits over preceding engine technologies. However, GDI engines are associated with higher levels of particulate matter (PM) emissions, which is a major concern for human health. The aim of this work is to broaden the understanding of the effect of hydrogen combustion and the influence of the three way catalytic converter (TWC) on PM emission characteristics. The presence of hydrogen in GDI engines has been reported to reduce fuel consumption and improve the combustion process, making it possible to induce higher rates of EGR. A prototype exhaust fuel reformer build for on-board vehicle hydrogen-rich gas (reformate) production has been integrated within the engine operation and studied in this work.
Technical Paper

Visualization of the Gas Flow Field within a Diesel Particulate Filter Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging

2015-09-01
2015-01-2009
In recent years magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been shown to be an attractive method for fluid flow visualization. In this work, we show how MRI velocimetry techniques can be used to non-invasively investigate and visualize the hydrodynamics of exhaust gas in a diesel particulate filter (DPF), both when clean and after loading with diesel engine exhaust particulate matter. The measurements have been used to directly measure the gas flow in the inlet and outlet channels of the DPF, both axial profiles along the length and profiles across the channel diameter. Further, from this information we show that it is possible to indirectly ascertain the superficial wall-flow gas velocity and the soot loading profiles along the filter channel length.
Technical Paper

Experimental and Modelling Study of Cold Start Effects on a Cu-Zeolite NH3 Selective Catalytic Reduction Catalyst

2015-09-01
2015-01-2011
Microreactor, engine bench tests and modelling studies have been carried out to understand the influence of cold start (low temperatures) on the performance of NH3/urea-SCR automotive exhaust aftertreatment systems. Water storage experiments using Simultaneous Thermal Analysis (STA) coupled with numerical modelling demonstrated that the exo/endo-therms associated with water adsorption and desorption at temperatures below 150°C strongly influence the catalyst temperature. Appreciable amounts of NO and NO2 could be stored on the catalyst during reactor or engine testing in the absence of any NH3 (blank tests). Modelling studies at different inlet NO2/NOx ratios demonstrated some of the influences of these surface adsorbed species on the performance of the SCR system during cold start.
Journal Article

Experimental and Modeling Study of Ash Impact on DPF Backpressure and Regeneration Behaviors

2015-04-14
2015-01-1063
One field-returned DPF loaded with a high amount of ash is examined using experimental and modeling approaches. The ash-related design factors are collected by coupling the inspection results from terahertz spectroscopy with a calibrated DPF model. The obtained ash packing density, ash layer permeability and ash distribution profile are then used in the simulation to assess the ash impact on DPF backpressure and regeneration behaviors. The following features have been observed during the simulation: 1 The ash packing density, ash layer permeability and ash distribution profile should be collected at the same time to ensure the accurate prediction of ash impact on DPF backpressure. Missing one ash property could mislead the measurement of the other two parameters and thus affects the DPF backpressure estimation. 2 The ash buildup would gradually increase the frequency for the backpressure-based active soot regeneration.
Journal Article

Impact of Accelerated Hydrothermal Aging on Structure and Performance of Cu-SSZ-13 SCR Catalysts

2015-04-14
2015-01-1022
In this contribution, nuanced changes of a commercial Cu-SSZ-13 catalyst with hydrothermal aging, which have not been previously reported, as well as their corresponding impact on SCR functions, are described. In particular, a sample of Cu-SSZ-13 was progressively aged between 550 to 900°C and the changes of performance in NH3 storage, oxidation functionality and NOx conversion of the catalyst were measured after hydrothermal exposure at each temperature. The catalysts thus aged were further characterized by NH3-TPD, XRD and DRIFTS techniques for structural changes. Based on the corresponding performance and structural characteristics, three different regimes of hydrothermal aging were identified, and tentatively as assigned to “mild”, “severe” and “extreme” aging. Progressive hydrothermal aging up to 750°C decreased NOx conversion to a small degree, as well as NH3 storage and oxidation functions.
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