The present invention relates to an exhaust gas aftertreatment system for treating exhaust gases from an internal combustion engine, comprising a soot catalytic converter and an SCR catalytic converter, which reduces NOx-emissions by means of a reagent delivered via a nozzle located upstream of the SCR catalytic converter.
Increasing requirements aimed at reducing exhaust emissions from heavy trucks and buses are leading to ever more advanced systems of exhaust gas aftertreatment. SCR (Selective Catalytic Reduction) is one such system for reducing NOx emissions, in which a reagent, in the form a urea/water solution, for example, is injected upstream of an SCR catalytic converter. DPF (Diesel Particulate Filters), in which the soot is burned by means of NO2 (so-called CRT or Continuously Regenerating Trap), is another system which reduces engine particulate emissions (which consist primarily of carbon). NO2 is produced by means of an oxidation catalytic converter located upstream of the particulate filter.
Various types of particulate filter exist, of which the so-called “wall flow” cordierite filter has been the most commonly used. Another type of filter that has emerged of late is the so-called “flow-through” filter. The latter is characterized in that it has a lower particulate reduction and is ash-permeable, thereby requiring no servicing.
The more stringent emission requirements are leading to a need to combine these two types of exhaust gas aftertreatment system, which often presents problems of insufficient installation space.
In hitherto known combined exhaust gas aftertreatment systems (SCR+DPF), the systems comprise components fitted in the following order:
Variants exist in which a hydrolysis catalytic converter may also be incorporated, primarily into the SCR catalytic converter, and the particulate filter may be catalytically coated, thereby avoiding the first oxidation catalytic converter downstream of the engine. They are all characterized, however, in that the particulate filter is located upstream of the urea injection. This has been essential where “wall flow” cordierite filters were used, due among other things to the fact that these collect ash, primarily calcium sulfate (i.e. gypsum), which presents problems if urea/water solution is injected upstream. They are further characterized by a considerable porous mass, which absorbs the ammonia formed and thereby makes transient urea dosing more difficult.
It is desirable to provide an effective exhaust gas aftertreatment system which is more compact that known systems.
The exhaust gas aftertreatment system according to an aspect of the invention for treating exhaust gases from an internal combustion engine comprises a soot catalytic converter and an SCR catalytic converter, which reduces NOx-emissions by means of a reagent delivered via a nozzle located upstream of the SCR catalytic converter and is characterized in that the soot catalytic converter is located between the nozzle and the SCR catalytic converter. This embodiment of the arrangement makes it possible to assemble multiple system components into one compact unit.
The invention will be described in more detail below with reference to exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings attached, in which
The internal combustion engine 10 represented schematically in
Exhaust gases that have passed through the turbocharger unit 16 are led onwards via the exhaust line 22 to an oxidation catalytic converter 23 for the production of NO2 for the exhaust gas flow. Downstream of the oxidation catalytic converter is a unit 24 for removing soot particles and NOx from the exhaust gas flow, which unit will be described with reference to FIG. 2. An injector 25 for mixing a reagent, such as urea or ammonia, for example, into the exhaust gas flow, is located upstream of the unit 24.
The unit 24 comprises an oval cylindrical casing 26 having two end walls 27, 28 and three internal dividing walls 29, 30, 31. An inlet pipe 32 extends from the side in through the casing 26 and via a pipe bend onwards in the longitudinal direction of the casing through the three dividing walls 29-31 to a distributing space 33 at the end wall 27.
Two catalytic converter units 34, 35 are fitted in parallel, each in its pipe in the casing, said pipes extending through the three dividing walls 29-31 with internal sealing in relation to said walls and external sealing in relation to the outer casing 26, in order to form two separate internal spaces 36, 37 in the casing. The space 36 situated nearest the distributing space 33 communicates via perforations 38 with the exhaust inlet 32. The space 36 therefore communicates with the distributing space 33 via the inlet pipe 32.
A further connection between the distributing space 33 and the space 36 is provided via a pipe 39, which extends between the distributing space 33 and the space 37, by the side of the other pipes in the casing 26. The pipe 39 is provided with perforations into the space 36 on the one hand and into the space 37 on the other. The provision of the pipe 39 allows the otherwise enclosed space 37 to serve as a sound-damping Helmholtz resonator for sound waves that occur in the exhaust gas flow from the engine 10. In addition, the pipe 39 forms a flow path from the space 36 to the distributing space 33 via said perforations, the flow path reducing the pressure gradient into the distributing space and furthermore increasing the scope for gasifying of the reagent in the exhaust gas flow.
The distributing space 33 distributes the exhaust gas flow entering via the inlet pipe 32 and the pipe 39 to the two catalytic converter units 34, 35, which are both identically fitted each with its particulate filter 40 of the soot catalytic converter type. The exhaust gas flow from this particulate filter thereafter passes through an SCR-catalytic converter 41, in which ammonia reacts with NOx to form N2. Finally the exhaust gas flow passes through an oxidation-catalytic converter 42, which removes any residual ammonia from the exhaust gas flow. The exhaust gas flow is then led via an outlet space 43 to an exhaust outlet 44.
The embodiment of the aftertreatment unit 24 according to the invention, in which the exhaust gas flow passes through the particulate filter 40 before it reaches the SCR catalytic converter 41, allows the injector 25 to be located advantageously close to the unit 24. Distribution and gasification of the reagent in the exhaust gas flow occurs in the pipes 32, 39, the distributing space 33 and the particulate filter 40. At the same time it becomes possible to locate the particulate filter, the SCR-catalytic converter and the oxidation catalytic converter as a common unit 24 in one and the same casing 26. If the injector 25 were instead to be located between the particulate filter and SCR-catalytic converter, the entire exhaust gas aftertreatment system would have to be configured differently, taking up more space.
The invention must not be regarded as being limited to the exemplary embodiments described above, a number of further variants and modifications being feasible without departing from the scope of the following patent claims. For example, the aftertreatment unit 24 need not be provided with multiple catalytic converter units arranged in parallel.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE06/00113 | 1/24/2006 | WO | 00 | 6/27/2008 |