The present invention is based on a device for introducing a processing agent downstream of the engine into an exhaust-gas stream.
From the German Published Patent Application No. 44 36 415, a device is already known in which a sheathed-element glow plug is used to supply fuel into the exhaust-gas tract in vaporized form.
The device of the present invention and the method of the present invention have the advantage over the related art that a condensing out of an already evaporated fuel in a downstream aftertreatment system may be prevented, so that the function of a catalytic converter, for example, is not detrimentally affected. On the one hand, the partial oxidation of the introduced processing agent advantageously raises the catalytic converter temperature, for example via the condensation temperature of the processing agent. On the other hand, the partially oxidized molecules of the processing agent have a lower dew point, so that the condensation is reduced by the partial oxidation, even if the exhaust-gas temperature is raised only slightly. A condensation of CO, for example, is ruled out under realistic conditions.
In an advantageous manner, means for conveying gas allow a space-saving and effective arrangement for the supply and for the oxidation via a gas discharge.
It is advantageous, in particular, to subdivide the region between the supply means and the excitation means for a gas discharge in such a way that the processing agent is first able to mix with a portion of the exhaust-gas flow. Given sufficient heat supply, a partial oxidation may thus already take place in the region in front of the gas discharge, on the one hand, and the processing agent is already so thoroughly mixed with the exhaust gas that further oxidation may commence immediately in the region of the gas discharge, on the other hand.
Providing a second orifice advantageously allows the additional supply of oxygen and promotes an efficient conveying of the radical-enriched exhaust gas-fuel mixture in the direction of the aftertreatment system.
In a simple manner, a spark plug, which has been known for a long time already, may be used as an excitation means for a gas discharge. The spark plug is located in spatial proximity to the means of supply of the processing agent, so that the exhaust gas-fuel mixture may effectively be enriched with radicals.
Exhaust gas 11 coming from an internal combustion engine meets device 1 and partially flows around it. However, because of orifices 30 and 31, exhaust gas also passes through the device, to the other side of the device, to the downstream exhaust-gas aftertreatment system, such as a reducing catalyst for NOX reduction, or a particle filter. Via heating means (not shown further), preheated fuel 20 is introduced into the ring gap around sheathed-element glow plug 16. The fuel evaporates and, in the region between orifice 30 and feed-through orifice 33, is mixed with exhaust gas flowing into orifice 30. A partial oxidation of the fuel already takes place at the hot tip of the sheathed-element glow plug. The mixture flows further through feed-through orifice 33. An electric arc is burning between this orifice and the tip of spark plug 15. This electric arc forms reactive radicals and increases the enthalpy of the mixture. Via orifice 31, additional oxygen reaches this second reaction zone together with the exhaust gas, so that the fuel continues to oxidize downstream from spark plug 15 once it has passed orifice 32.
If spark plug 15 is electrically controlled by the requisite ignition voltage, a gas discharge is excited between tip 15a of the spark plug and feed-through orifice 33. The fuel-exhaust-gas mixture entering from sheathed-element glow plug 16 through feed-through orifice 33 is additionally enriched via feed-through orifice 31 with oxygen present in the exhaust gas and excited in the burning electric arc to form reactive radicals. The mixture mixed with radicals leaves the device through orifice 32 and oxidizes further, so that a downstream aftertreatment system is able to be supplied with heated and oxygen-rich exhaust gases.
The device according to the present invention may be used in different aftertreatment systems, since an at least partial oxidation of the fuel in front of the exhaust-gas aftertreatment system is desired both in the regeneration of catalytic converters with hydrocarbon trap and in the regeneration of particle filters. In catalytic converters with hydrocarbon trap, any oxygen present in the exhaust gas must be reduced, and in the particle filter, the fuel oxidation results in the desired temperature increase in the exhaust gas as required for particle-filter regeneration.
In the device according to the present invention, the means for supplying fuel and the spark plug that forms the electric arc are arranged on one axis, the fuel vapor flowing in the direction of the spark plug. However, in an alternative specific embodiment, the spark plug may also be arranged slightly to the side or in the flow direction, at an offset relative to sheathed-element glow plug 16, as long as it is ensured that the fuel vapor is incorporated in the electric arc that forms between the metal block and the spark plug, that is, as long as the supply means may interact with the spark plug, in the sense that an at least partial oxidation of the supplied processing agent may be supported prior to entrance into the aftertreatment system.
In an additional alternative specific embodiment, it is also possible to introduce the fuel into the ring gap between cylindrical body 5 and sheathed-element glow plug 16 already in pre-vaporized form, so that the sheathed-element glow plug is used only for converting already condensed-out fuel back into the gas phase again, thereby ensuring that no fuel in liquid form can reach, for example, the downstream catalytic converter, or that no fuel may condense out there.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
101 06 503 | Feb 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE02/00370 | 2/1/2002 | WO | 00 | 12/23/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/064954 | 8/22/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4574589 | Hasegawa et al. | Mar 1986 | A |
4576617 | Renevot | Mar 1986 | A |
4651524 | Brighton | Mar 1987 | A |
4662172 | Shinzawa et al. | May 1987 | A |
4711087 | Kawamura | Dec 1987 | A |
4991396 | Goerlich et al. | Feb 1991 | A |
5771689 | Bareis et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5826428 | Blaschke | Oct 1998 | A |
6176078 | Balko et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
44 36 415 | Apr 1996 | DE |
195 10 804 | Sep 1996 | DE |
198 20 682 | Nov 1998 | DE |
01 00310 | Jan 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040081592 A1 | Apr 2004 | US |