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Effects of Post-Injection Strategy on the Performance of Diesel Catalyst-Heating Operation Sandia National Laboratories

SAE Technical Papers (1906-current) Available online

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Format:
Book
Conference/Event
Author/Creator:
Lopez Pintor, Dario, author.
Contributor:
Abboud, Rami
Busch, Stephen
Cho, Seokwon
Lee, Sanguk
Narayanan, Abhinandhan
Wu, Angela
Conference Name:
WCX SAE World Congress Experience (2025-04-08 : Detroit, Michigan, United States)
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource cm
Place of Publication:
Warrendale, PA SAE International 2025
Summary:
Minimizing the time needed to achieve light-off temperatures in diesel engine aftertreatment devices is key to mitigate pollutant emissions during the first minutes of operation. Catalyst heating operation typically includes one or multiple post-injections late during the expansion stroke aimed to increase the enthalpy of the exhaust gases. However, post-injection retardability is constrained by low combustion efficiency and the formation of CO and unburned hydrocarbons that cannot be oxidized by a still-inactive oxidation catalyst.In this study, the effects of post-injection strategy on the performance and emissions of a medium duty diesel engine have been investigated experimentally, focusing on the impacts on post-injection retardability. A five injection strategy (two pilot, one main, two post) was implemented in the engine, and the injection duration ratio between the two post-injections has been varied systematically while performing post-injection timing sweeps to identify the trade-offs between exhaust enthalpy, emissions, fuel delivered by each post-injection, and post-injection timing. The exhaust enthalpy and the indicated specific CO and unburned hydrocarbon emissions increase as the post-injection retard for all the injection duration ratios. However, this effect is more dramatic for long first post injection durations and short second post injection durations (id est, a high first-to-second post-injection duration ratio). For these cases, the fuel vaporization cooling effect of the first post-injection on the in-cylinder reactivity causes that both post injections burn together at lower in-cylinder temperatures than those of the other first-to-second injection duration ratios, leading to higher emissions with no significant advantages in exhaust enthalpy. In general, a fuel split ratio equal to 1 with half of the fuel injected in the second post-injection, which ignition is sustained by half of the fuel injected in the first post-injection provides better performance-emissions trade-off and higher post-injection retardability
Notes:
Vendor supplied data
Publisher Number:
2025-01-8414
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license

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