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Technical Paper

Thin Film Pressure Sensor Technology Applied to Catalytic Converter Packaging

2001-03-05
2001-01-0223
Application of new ultra-thinwall ceramic substrate technology to many new vehicle exhaust emission applications has lead to an interest in better understanding the pressures to which substrates are exposed during packaging operations. A recently identified thin film load cell technology has permitted a more analytical evaluation of pressure distributions that develop during ceramic substrate packaging. The optimum configuration of this technique for studying canning operations will be investigated as part of the study. In addition to identifying the characteristic pressure distributions created during canning processes, the impact of various process parameters on this distribution was also investigated.
Technical Paper

Thermal Cyclic Evaluation of Catalytic Converter Mount Systems

1996-10-01
962078
A bench scale thermal cycling device was designed and constructed to expose large numbers of converters to simulated automobile cycling conditions. Ceramic catalytic converter systems exposed to this thermal cycling technique were observed to experience equivalent or more severe aging, depending on the aging temperature, than isothermal exposures. Cyclic thermal exposures were examined for two mat basis weights. Each mat was examined at two gap bulk densities. Change in converter residual shear strength, as a function of accumulated thermal cycles, was observed to follow a logarithmic relationship. Results of thermal cyclic engine exposures showed a strong correlation with laboratory bench studies.
Technical Paper

Low Temperature Catalytic Converter Durability

2000-03-06
2000-01-0220
In this study quantitative techniques were established to assess the low temperature durability of commercially available mat systems. A new low temperature dynamic resistive thermal exposure (LT-RTE) test method was developed. The mats were evaluated in thermal cycling with maximum substrate skin temperatures from 280°C to 450°C. Results indicate that at low use temperatures the residual shear strength of the mat fell to ∼5-15KPa following 280°C cycling. Under the same LT-RTE exposure conditions an equivalent mat system, following thermal preconditioning to 500°C for 3 hours, possessed a residual shear strength of ∼30KPa. An alternative mat system with a lower shot content fiber was also evaluated, following the same thermal preconditioning previously described. This alternative mat was found to exhibit substantially higher residual shear strengths following LT-RTE aging. A residual shear strength of ∼95KPa was observed for this alternative mat following 280°C LT-RTE aging.
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