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Technical Paper

Lean Breakthrough Phenomena Analysis for TWC OBD on a Natural Gas Engine using a Dual-Site Dynamic Oxygen Storage Capacity Model

2017-03-28
2017-01-0962
Oxygen storage capacity (OSC) is one of the most critical characteristics of a three-way catalyst (TWC) and is closely related to the catalyst aging and performance. In this study, a dynamic OSC model involving two oxygen storage sites with distinct kinetics was developed. The dual-site OSC model was validated on a bench reactor and a natural gas engine. The model was capable of predicting temperature dependence on OSC with H2, CO and CH4 as reductants. Also, the effects of oxygen concentration and space velocity on the amount of OSC were captured by the model. The validated OSC model was applied to simulate lean breakthrough phenomena with varied space velocities and oxygen concentrations. It is found that OSC during lean breakthrough is not a constant for a particular TWC catalyst and is dependent on space velocity and oxygen concentration. Specifically, breakthrough time exhibits a non-linear, inverse correlation to oxygen flux.
Technical Paper

Impact of Chemical Contaminants on Stoichiometric Natural Gas Engine Three-Way Catalysts with High Mileage History

2022-03-29
2022-01-0542
Stoichiometric natural gas engines with three-way catalysts emit less NOx and CH4 due to their higher efficiency compared to lean-burn natural gas engines. Although hydrothermal aging of three-way catalysts has been extensively studied, a deeper understanding beyond hydrothermal aging is needed to explain real-world performance, especially for natural gas engines with near-zero NOx emissions. In this investigation, field-aged three-way catalysts were characterized to identify the contribution of chemical aging to their overall performance. It was found that the sulfur species on the field-aged TWCs were entirely distributed along the catalyst length, showing a decreasing trend, whereas phosphorous contamination was mainly observed at the inlet section of the three-way catalysts, and the phosphorous concentration declined sharply along the axial length.
Technical Paper

Diagnostics of Field-Aged Three-Way Catalyst (TWC) on Stoichiometric Natural Gas Engines

2019-04-02
2019-01-0998
Three-way catalysts have been used in a variety of stoichiometric natural gas engines for emission control. During real-world operation, these catalysts have experienced a large number of temporary and permanent deactivations including thermal aging and chemical contamination. Thermal aging is typically induced either by high engine-out exhaust temperatures or the reaction exotherm generated on the catalysts. Chemical contamination originates from various inorganic species such as Phosphorous (P) and Sulfur (S) that contain in engine fluids, which can poison and/or mask the catalyst active components. Such deactivations are quite difficult to simulate under laboratory conditions, due to the fact that multiple deactivation modes may occur at the same time in the real-world operations. In this work, a set of field-aged TWCs has been analyzed through detailed laboratory research in order to identify and quantify the real-world aging mechanisms.
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