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Technical Paper

An Aerodynamically Regenerated Diesel Particulate Trap Coupled to an Electric Soot Incinerator with Dual Wall-Flow Filters

1995-02-01
950371
The development of a soot incinerator with dual ceramic filters and an electric strip heater is discussed herein. The incinerator is designed to operate in series with a diesel particulate trap developed previously (1).1 The particulate trap consists of a primary ceramic monolith which serves as the filtering device. Once the primary monolith has collected enough soot from the exhaust flow to induce a substantial amount of back pressure to the engine, it is cleaned aerodynamically using short pulses of compressed air. The soot is then forced through a reed valve and into the incinerator chamber, where some of the particulates come in contact with an electric strip heater and burn. The regeneration air exits the incinerator through two secondary ceramic wall-flow rectangular filters, where any unburned particulates are retained. Filtered regeneration air is, thus, released to the atmosphere.
Technical Paper

Reducing Diesel Particulate and NOx Emissions via Filtration and Particle-Free Exhaust Gas Recirculation

1995-02-01
950736
A diesel emission control system, which can simultaneously reduce particulate and NOx emissions through filtration and particle-free Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) has been developed and tested. The key element of the system is a novel ceramic fitter which has shown virtually complete soot removal from diesel exhaust streams. Regeneration of the filter was accomplished by periodically backpulsing the filter with short pulses of compressed air. Testing of the system was carried out using a Caterpillar generator set powered by a 65 kW diesel engine, and a separate load bank which allowed the engine to operate at various load settings. The filter unit consisted of four CeraMem filters (150 mm2 x 305 mm long, 4 mm2 cell), a backpulsing system for filter regeneration, and a baghouse for soot collection. NOx reduction of 75% was achieved at full engine load and a 30% EGR rate.
Technical Paper

An Optimization Study on the Control of NOx and Particulate Emissions from Diesel Engines

1996-02-01
960473
This is an optimization study on the use of filtered exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) to reduce the NO emissions of diesel engines. Control of the particulate emissions and provisions for filtered EGR were achieved by an Aerodynamically Regenerated Trap (ART) with collection efficiencies in the order of 99%. The amount of EGR was regulated to provide for substantial NO reduction, without unacceptably decreasing the thermal efficiency of the engine or increasing the CO emissions. EGR regulation was accomplished by monitoring the injection pump setting which was correlated to the fuel flow rate, the speed of the engine, the amount of EGR flow, and the ambient air temperature. Through these parameters, the mixture strength expressed as the equivalence ratio, ϕ, was calculated and related to the power output of the engine. Thus, a map of engine performance parameters was generated and related to measured NO and CO emissions.
Technical Paper

An Integrated Diesel Engine ART-EGR System for Particulate/NOx Control Using Engine Sensory Inputs

1997-02-24
970477
New developments for optimized control of Aerodynamically Regenerated Traps (ART) - Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) integrated systems for diesel engines are presented herein. Such systems employ high-efficiency ceramic monolith filters to retain 99% of the emitted particulates. Regeneration is achieved periodically by short pulses of compressed air, flowing in the opposite direction to the exhaust. The soot is collected in a chamber, outside of the monolith, where it is oxidized with an electric burner. A fraction of the filtered exhaust is returned to the engine and this reduces NOx emissions, typically, by more than 50% at 18% EGR. However, since the amount of EGR, the frequency of regeneration and the frequency and duration of burning have a bearing on the fuel consumption of the engine, their optimization is imperative. Thus, provisions were made to collect intelligent information, leading to continuous assessment of the engine performance and fuel economy.
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