The invention concerns a procedure according to the preamble of claim 1 and a control unit according to the preamble of claim 9. The catalytic converter having three-way conversion characteristics can be an oxidation catalytic converter and/or a NOx storage catalytic converter.
The admissible emissions from diesel engines are being increasingly limited by law. Diesel engines deployed in production motor vehicles produce comparatively high NOx exhaust-gas emissions before the catalytic converter especially at the time when the vehicle is powerfully accelerated in the lower and middle speed ranges of the diesel engine with virtually full throttle, and for this reason the engine is close to the smoke limit. This is particularly problematic with admissible aggregate emissions in mind in driving cycles with a large proportion of such powerful instances of acceleration.
The test for adherence to admissible emission standards occurs under defined operational conditions in selected driving cycles on a roller dynamometer. The FTP75 driving cycle used in the USA has a large proportion of such powerful instances of acceleration. At the same time, American law sets down very demanding NOx threshold values specifically for this driving cycle. The task resultant from this is to effectively reduce the NOx emissions specifically in the aforementioned instances of powerful accelerations.
This task is solved by a procedure of the kind mentioned at the beginning of the application by means of the distinguishing characteristics of claim 1 and by a control unit of the kind mentioned at the beginning of the application by means of the distinguishing characteristics of claim 9.
The three-way conversion with on average stoichiometric fuel/air mixture and alternating production of oxidizing and reductive exhaust gas atmospheres before the catalytic converter constitutes the state of the art with regard to gasoline engines. The three-way conversion of pollutants has not as of yet been used for NOx reduction in diesel engines operating with excess air. This is the case because HC proportions and CO proportions in the exhaust gas of the diesel engine at the catalytic converter react preferably with the residual oxygen from the exhaust gas and less with the nitrogen oxides contained in the exhaust gas.
For this reason, other concepts, which have a NOx storage catalytic converter or a system for the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of the nitrogen oxides, are preferred for the NOx conversion in diesel engines.
The NOx storage catalytic converter stores during an operation with excess air, i.e. during an oxidized exhaust gas atmosphere, nitrogen oxides, which have been emitted, and converts these stored nitrogen oxides in a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere among other things to molecular nitrogen. The oxidized exhaust gas atmosphere (Lambda greater than 1) can in the process be maintained for time periods in the magnitude of a few minutes before the diesel engine is operated to regenerate the storage catalytic converter for a time period in the magnitude of seconds, in order that it produces the reductive exhaust gas atmosphere (Lambda smaller than 1). A known combustion procedure for the operation of diesel engines with Lambda values less than one makes provision for a switching of the Lambda value during the quasi-steady state operation of the diesel engine. By a quasi-steady state operation of the diesel engine, an operation is thereby understood in which the rotational speed and load of the engine change very little. The procedure is performed in this manner because in the case of a quasi-steady state operation of the engine, the switching of the air mass or the fresh air proportion of a combustion chamber filling from the set point value for the lean operation (Lambda >1, for example Lambda=3) to the set point value in the rich operation (for example Lambda=0.9) can best be executed without a backlash effect on the torque and the drivability of the motor vehicle. This procedural approach, according to which an operation required for the regeneration with Lambda <1 occurs only during quasi-steady state operating conditions, is a disadvantage with regard to driving cycles, in which these conditions are seldom present, because powerful accelerations often occur.
In contrast the diesel engine is operated by means of the invention in such a way during powerful accelerations that it produces alternately an oxidizing and a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere before the catalytic converter. As a result of this, several advantages occur simultaneously:
An initial advantage is that the nitrogen oxides emitted in comparatively large amounts precisely in this operating range of the engine are effectively reduced by way of a three-way conversion. A direct conversion of the relatively high NOx emissions is thus achieved in this operating range as a result of the three-way catalytic converter function. This advantage is independent of whether the exhaust gas aftertreatment system of the diesel engine has a storage catalytic converter and also occurs, for example, during the use of an oxidation catalytic converter as a component part of the exhaust gas aftertreatment system. If the exhaust gas aftertreatment system has a storage converter, the additional advantage arises of being further able to regenerate the storage catalytic converter entirely or partially.
It is additionally advantageous that the Lambda value for the combustion chamber fillings already drops from Lambda values in the magnitude of 2 to 4 to Lambda values in the magnitude of 1.1 to 1.6. This drop results by means of the closed-loop quality control of the diesel engine, in which the torque is adjusted less by the amount (quantity) of the combustion chamber filling and more by way of the fuel proportion (quality) of the combustion chamber filling. High torque demands, which are present during powerful accelerations, lead accordingly to high fuel proportions and for that reason to the aforementioned Lambda values in the magnitude of 1.1 to 1.6, which already lie comparatively close to the Lambda values, at which a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere occurs.
An additional advantage is that modern diesel engine management systems already adjust the air mass, respectively the fresh air proportion of the combustion chamber fillings, in the operating points characteristic for a powerful acceleration virtually optimally for Lambda values smaller than 1. For that reason, the actual adjustment to Lambda values smaller than 1 occur by way of changes in the injection; that is to say by changes in the quantity and if need be changes in the distribution of the quantity to one or several partial injections and/or to one or several points of injection time. Interventions into the intake air system serving the additional reduction of the air masses are necessary to a lesser extent due to the already low Lambdas; however they are not excluded from consideration.
Significant improvements in the NOx conversion performance during driving cycles with frequent acceleration phases are as a whole accomplished by the aforementioned advantages. The interventions into the diesel engine management system required to achieve these improvements do indeed change the noise of combustion and the torque generation. These changes are, however, expected when the driver's input demands powerful acceleration and, therefore, shouldn't disturb the driver.
Additional advantages result from the description and the accompanying figures.
It goes without saying that the previously mentioned characteristics and those, which will be subsequently explained, are not only applicable in the combination put forth in each case, but are also applicable in other combinations or individually without departing from the framework of the invention at hand.
Examples of embodiment of the invention are depicted in the drawings and are explained in detail in the following description. In each case the following are shown in schematic representations:
The control unit 14 calculates from the engine rotational speed n and the air mass mL among other things values for the fillings of the combustion chambers of the diesel engine 10 with air. Modern diesel engines have beyond these additional sensors, which acquire additional operating parameters like temperature, and/or concentrations of exhaust gas components, and/or combustion chamber pressures etc. The list of the sensors 16, 18 and 20 enumerated here is, therefore, not intended to be a final list.
The control unit 14 activates additionally actuating elements of the diesel engine 10, in order to operate the diesel engine 10 in a desired manner. The engine management system proceeds particularly in such a manner that the diesel engine 10 provides the torque desired by the driver. In so doing, the control unit 10 controls particularly the quantity of fuel injected by way of an injection valve configuration 22 into the combustion chambers of the diesel engine 10. Modern diesel engines have beyond the injection valve configuration 22 additional actuating elements like exhaust gas recirculation valves, turbo chargers with adjustable turbine geometry, throttle valves to choke the air supply, etc. While the injection valve configuration 22 can be assigned to a fuel management of the diesel engine 10, the other aforementioned actuating elements can be assigned to an air management of the diesel engine 10. Also in this case, it is true that the aforementioned actuating elements should not be understood as a final list.
The exhaust gas aftertreatment system 12 has at least one catalytic converter 24 and/or 26 with three-way conversion characteristics. In the embodiment in
The diesel engine 10 is operated in such a manner during a sufficiently powerful acceleration of the motor vehicle, which emerges during a corresponding torque request by the driver in the lower and middle engine rotational speed range, within the framework of the invention by means of interventions of the control unit 14 into the air management and/or the fuel management, so that the diesel engine 10 generates alternately an oxidizing and a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere before the oxidation catalytic converter 24 as an embodiment of a catalytic converter with three-way conversion characteristics.
The engine management of the diesel engine 10 by the control unit 14 occurs not only in such a way that the requested torque is provided, but additionally in such a way that a NOx conversion results effectively as possible through the interaction of the exhaust gases of the diesel engine 10 with their exhaust gas aftertreatment system 12.
In order to recognize the sufficiently powerful accelerations, which serve as a triggering criterion for an operation with an alternating oxidizing and reductive exhaust gas atmosphere, operating parameters and/or alterations in the operating parameters of the diesel engine 10 are evaluated in an embodiment. In an embodiment, values of a fuel mass mk injected per combustion chamber filling and of the rotational speed n of the diesel engine 10 are evaluated.
Additionally four operating points BP1, BP2, BP3 and BP4 are emphasized in
The fuel mass mk represents thereby all parameters, which display a load of the diesel engine 10. Instead of the fuel mass mk, the parameter of the torque request can, for example, be used for the load. Additionally a measurement for the load can also be derived from signals of a combustion chamber sensor, a supercharging pressure sensor etc.
In a preferred embodiment, a sufficiently powerful acceleration is then recognized, if the rotational speed n of the diesel engine 10 increases without an engine rotational speed threshold value n_S being exceeded in the process, and its load thereby is greater than a load threshold value mk_S. This is the case in
The diesel engine 10 according to the invention is operated in such a way during such a transition, which denotes a powerful acceleration, that the engine alternately generates an oxidizing and a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere before the catalytic converter 24.
This is explained in detail below by reference to
b shows a corresponding progression 34 of the air number λ (solid line), how it appears during a familiar procedure, and a progression 36 of the air number λ (dotted line), how it appears during the implementation of the procedure according to the invention. In the Figure, the air number λ indicates recognizably the ratio of two air quantities, whereby a first air quantity is available in the numerator for the combustion of a certain fuel mass, and the air mass located in the denominator corresponds to the air mass, which is required for a stoichiometric combustion of this fuel mass. λ-values greater than 1 correspond as a result to an air surplus and lead to an oxidizing exhaust gas atmosphere, whereas λ-values smaller than 1 correspond to a lack of air or a fuel surplus and lead, therefore, to a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere.
In the progression 34 the increase in the fuel mass mk by means of the reduction to λ-values in the neighborhood of 1 is depicted during the transition between the operating points BP1 and BP4, whereby the adjusted λ-values, however, run permanently above the λ=1 line. Accordingly an oxidizing exhaust gas atmosphere occurs constantly before the catalytic converter 24 during the progression 34. Within the exhaust gas atmosphere, the elevated NOx emissions of the progression 32 from the
In contrast a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere, which is alternately generated with an oxidizing exhaust gas atmosphere, also emerges in the progression 36, which periodically undershoots the λ=1 line. As a consequence, the inherently known three-way conversion effect occurs, during which the elevated NOx emissions of the progression 32 from the
If on the other hand the request in step 42 is negated, this indicates an operating state with a comparatively demanding load and a low engine rotational speed, which is typical for an individual acceleration. In this case, the program branches further into step 44, in which the control unit 14 sets alternately λ-values >1 and <1, so that the diesel engine 10 alternately generates an oxidizing and a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere before the catalytic converter 24.
The threshold value mk_S preferably draws a clear dividing line between the operating states lying in the vicinity of the full load and other operating states. The threshold value n_S preferably draws a dividing line between low and average engine rotational speeds and higher rotational speeds. The threshold value mk_S lies in one embodiment at approximately 80% of the full load value mk_max, and the engine rotational speed threshold value n_S lies in one embodiment at approximately 60% of the maximum rotational speed n_max.
The λ-value of the oxidizing exhaust gas atmosphere is preferably already reduced to a value of λ>1.2 before the generation of the reductive exhaust gas atmosphere in step 44.
It is also preferred that the λ-value is >0.8 during the generation of the reductive exhaust gas atmosphere and remain <1.2 during the generation of the oxidizing exhaust gas atmosphere. This produces comparatively small fluctuations of the λ-value during the transition between the reductive exhaust gas atmosphere and the oxidizing exhaust gas atmosphere and vice versa. As a consequence only fluctuations in torque and fluctuations in combustion noise arise, which are still tolerable.
Additionally the alternating generation of the reductive and oxidizing exhaust gas atmosphere in step 44 is controlled through interventions into the fuel system, respectively into the fuel management of the diesel engine 10. This can, for example, result by a change in the injected fuel quantities mk and/or the fuel injection paradigm. In so doing, it is especially preferable when the injected fuel quantities and the fuel injection paradigm are altered in such a manner, that effects of the change in injected fuel quantities on the torque of the diesel engine 10 are at least partially compensated for by the effects of the fuel injection paradigm on the torque. This can, for example, thereby be achieved, in that an increase in the injected fuel quantity to achieve a reductive exhaust gas atmosphere is combined with a retarding of the start of injection.
The alternating generation of the reductive and oxidizing exhaust gas atmospheres leads then not only to a direct catalytic conversion of the elevated NOx emissions before the catalytic converter of the diesel engine 10; but it additionally effectuates the complete or partial regeneration of the NOx storage catalytic converter 26, when the time periods with the reductive exhaust gas atmosphere are of sufficient length. Provision is made in an additional embodiment to improve the regeneration, in that a ratio between reductive and oxidizing exhaust gas components is controlled during the alternating generation of the oxidizing and the reductive exhaust gas atmosphere as a function of the degree of depletion B from nitrogen of the NOx storage catalytic converter 26.
The control unit 14 thus characterizes itself, in that it is constructed and especially programmed for the purpose of controlling the diesel engine 10 according to one of the procedures described here.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 041 674 | Sep 2006 | DE | national |
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5018494 | Sonoda et al. | May 1991 | A |
5622047 | Yamashita et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
5771686 | Pischinger et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080053077 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |