NO2 Formation and Mitigation in an Advanced Diesel Aftertreatment System

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan Ottinger ◽  
Yuanzhou Xi ◽  
Niklas Schmidt ◽  
Z. Gerald Liu
2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 1134-1146
Author(s):  
Kalen R Vos ◽  
Gregory M Shaver ◽  
Mrunal C Joshi ◽  
James McCarthy

Aftertreatment thermal management is critical for regulating emissions in modern diesel engines. Elevated engine-out temperatures and mass flows are effective at increasing the temperature of an aftertreatment system to enable efficient emission reduction. In this effort, experiments and analysis demonstrated that increasing the idle speed, while maintaining the same idle load, enables improved aftertreatment “warm-up” performance with engine-out NOx and particulate matter levels no higher than a state-of-the-art thermal calibration at conventional idle operation (800 rpm and 1.3 bar brake mean effective pressure). Elevated idle speeds of 1000 and 1200 rpm, compared to conventional idle at 800 rpm, realized 31%–51% increase in exhaust flow and 25 °C–40 °C increase in engine-out temperature, respectively. This study also demonstrated additional engine-out temperature benefits at all three idle speeds considered (800, 1000, and 1200 rpm, without compromising the exhaust flow rates or emissions, by modulating the exhaust valve opening timing. Early exhaust valve opening realizes up to ~51% increase in exhaust flow and 50 °C increase in engine-out temperature relative to conventional idle operation by forcing the engine to work harder via an early blowdown of the exhaust gas. This early blowdown of exhaust gas also reduces the time available for particulate matter oxidization, effectively limiting the ability to elevate engine-out temperatures for the early exhaust valve opening strategy. Alternatively, late exhaust valve opening realizes up to ~51% increase in exhaust flow and 91 °C increase in engine-out temperature relative to conventional idle operation by forcing the engine to work harder to pump in-cylinder gases across a smaller exhaust valve opening. In short, this study demonstrates how increased idle speeds, and exhaust valve opening modulation, individually or combined, can be used to significantly increase the “warm-up” rate of an aftertreatment system.


Author(s):  
G.O. Umosekhaimhe ◽  
S.E. Umukoro

The thermochemical properties of varieties of species needed to assess the most prominent pathways of tropospheric ozone transformation have been established. In the troposphere, ozone which is a secondary pollution produced by photochemical induced transformation, acts as an oxidizing agent to numerous atmospheric reactions leading to the formation of particulate matter. Based on the climate related problems resulting from the precursor of particulate matter, it is adequate to establish the feasible routes of ozone formation. In this study, the electronic structure methods which approximate the Schrödinger equation to compute Gibbs free energies and enthalpies of formation of the various chemical species participating in the reactions were used. These thermodynamic properties were determined using four computational model chemistry methods integrated in the Gaussian 03 (G03) chemistry package. Five known reaction pathways for the formation of NO2 (the O3 precursor specie), as well as the dominant ozone formation route from NO2 were examined and their energies determined. Of all the computational methods, the complete basis set (CBS-4M) method produced energies for all species of the five reaction routes. Out of the five routes, only the reactions involving radical species were favoured to completion over a temperature range of -100 and +100oC. The most relevant reaction route for the formation of NO2 and subsequently O3 is that involving the peroxyl acetyl nitrate (PAN) and hydroxyl radicals. Chemical equilibrium analyses of the reaction routes also indicated that reduction in temperature encourages NO2 formation while increase in temperature favours O3 production.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federico Millo ◽  
Benedetta Peiretti Paradisi ◽  
Francesco Sapio ◽  
Renzo Arina ◽  
Andrea Bianco ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Pingen Chen ◽  
Qinghua Lin

The configuration and control of aftertreatment systems have a significant impact on their functionalities and emission control performance. The traditional aftertreatment system configurations, i.e., connections from one aftertreatment subsystem to another subsystem in series, are simple but generally do not yield the optimal aftertreatment system performance. New aftertreatment configurations, in conjunction with new engine and aftertreatment control, can significantly improve engine efficiency and emission reduction performance. However, new configuration design requires human intuition and in-depth knowledge of engine and aftertreatment system design and control. The purpose of this study is to develop a general systematic and computationally-efficient method which enables automated and simultaneous optimization of passive selective catalytic reduction (SCR) system architectures and the associated non-uniform cylinder-to-cylinder combustion (NUCCC) controls based on a newly proposed highly reconfigurable passive SCR model structure and integer partition theory. The proposed method is general enough to account for passive SCR systems with two or more TWC stages. We demonstrate through this case study that the optimized passive SCR configuration, in conjunction with the optimized NUCCC control, can reduce the NH3 specific fuel consumption by up to 21.90%.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis Igorevich Andrianov ◽  
Farzad Keynejad ◽  
Robert Dingli ◽  
Glen Voice ◽  
Michael John Brear ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 38 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 271-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Yu. Stakheev ◽  
C. W. Lee ◽  
S. J. Park ◽  
P. J. Chong

2020 ◽  
pp. 236-236
Author(s):  
Xuebin Wang ◽  
Gaofeng Dai ◽  
Gregory Yablonsk ◽  
Milan Vujanovic ◽  
Richard Axelbaum

Pressurized oxy-combustion is a promising technology that can significantly reduce the energy penalty associated with first generation oxy-combustion for CO2 capture in coal-fired power plants. However, higher pressure enhances the production of strong acid gases, including NO2 and SO3, aggravating the corrosion threat during flue gas recirculation. In the flame region, high temperature NOx exists mainly as NO, while conversion from NO to NO2 happened in post-flame region. In this study, the conversion of NO ? NO2 has been kinetically evaluated under representative post-flame conditions of pressurized oxy-combustion after validating the mechanism (80 species and 464 reactions), which includes nitrogen and sulfur chemistry based on GRI-Mech 3.0. The effects of residence time, temperature, pressure, major species (O2/H2O), and minor or trace species (CO/SOx) on NO2 formation are studied. The calculation results show that when pressure is increased from 1 to 15 bar, NO2 is increased from 1 to 60 ppm, and the acid dew point increases by over 80?C. Higher pressure and temperature greatly reduce the time required to reach equilibrium, e.g., at 15 bar and 1300?C, equilibrium is reached in 1 millisecond and the NO2/NO is about 0.8%. The formation and destruction of NO2 is generally through the reversible reactions: NO+O+M=NO2+M, HO2+NO=NO2+OH, and NO+O2=NO2+O. With increasing pressure and decreasing temperature, O plays a much more important role than HO2 in the oxidation of NO. A higher water vapor content accelerates NO2 formation in all cases by providing more O and HO2 radicals. The addition of CO or SO2 also promotes the formation of NO2. Finally, NO2 formation in a Pressurized oxy-combustion furnace is compared with that in a practical atmospheric air-combustion furnace and the comparison show that NO2 formation in a Pressurized oxy-combustion furnace can be over 10 times that of an atmospheric air-combustion furnace.


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