This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-119713, filed on May 25, 2010, the contents of which is incorporated herein by reference, which serves as priority for PCT Application No. PCT/JP2011/061212, filed May 16, 2011.
The present invention relates to a selective catalytic reduction (“SCR”) system provided with an fixation prevention system that prevents malfunction of a dosing valve by preventing crystallization of urea solution in the dosing valve and fixation of the crystal to a cylinder or valving element of the dosing valve.
An SCR system incorporating an SCR device that has been developed is an exhaust gas purification system that purifies exhaust gas of a diesel engine of NOX.
The SCR system is to purify exhaust gas of NOX by supplying urea solution stored in a urea tank to an upstream part of the exhaust gas and reducing the NOX on an SCR catalyst with ammonia derived from the urea solution by the heat of the exhaust gas (see Patent Literature 1, for example).
A process of deriving ammonia from urea solution will be described below with reference to
As shown in
The urea solution is injected through a dosing valve (a urea injection device or a dosing module) provided to be exposed in the exhaust pipe at the upstream side of the SCR device.
As shown in
The dosing valve 104 is provided in the exhaust pipe, through which exhaust gas at high temperature flows. Therefore, as the temperature of the dosing valve 104 rises, the temperature of the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 also rises. As a result, the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 crystallizes and adheres to the valving element 129 as shown in
Patent Literature 1: Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2000-303826
When the urea solution is injected through the dosing valve 104, the failure described above does not occur because the urea solution in the urea tank that is not at high temperature is appropriately supplied to the dosing valve 104.
However, the injection of the urea solution through the dosing valve 104 occurs only at temperatures at which the SCR catalyst is active, that is, at temperatures at which the purification reaction with the SCR catalyst occurs. Since the temperatures at which the SCR catalyst is active are those equal to or higher than C ° C., there is a problem that the urea solution remains in the dosing valve 104 and crystallizes to cause malfunction of the dosing valve 104 at temperatures equal to or higher than A ° C. at which the urea solution starts crystallizing and lower than C ° C. at which the SCR catalyst becomes active.
Thus, an object of the present invention is to provide an SCR system that can prevent fixation of urea solution to the interior of a dosing valve when the urea solution is not injected through the dosing valve.
The present invention has been devised to attain the object described above. An SCR system is provided including a dosing valve that is provided to be exposed in an exhaust pipe to inject urea solution on an upstream side of an SCR device and a supply module that sucks up urea solution in a urea tank and supplies the urea solution to the dosing valve and feeds the urea solution in the dosing valve back to the urea tank, the dosing valve being closed when an exhaust gas temperature is lower than a temperature at which an SCR catalyst becomes active, wherein the SCR system further includes a fixation prevention system that opens the dosing valve and controls the supply module to feed the urea solution in the dosing valve back to the urea tank to prevent fixation of the urea solution to an interior of the dosing valve when the exhaust gas temperature is equal to or higher than a temperature at which the urea solution crystallizes and lower than the temperature at which the SCR catalyst becomes active.
An SCR system is provided including a dosing valve that is provided to be exposed in an exhaust pipe to inject urea solution on an upstream side of an SCR device and a supply module that sucks up urea solution in a urea tank and supplies the urea solution to the dosing valve and feeds the urea solution in the dosing valve back to the urea tank, the dosing valve being closed when an exhaust gas temperature is lower than a temperature at which an SCR catalyst becomes active, wherein the SCR system further includes an fixation prevention system that opens the dosing valve at predetermined time intervals to prevent fixation of the urea solution to an interior of the dosing valve when the exhaust gas temperature is equal to or higher than a temperature at which the urea solution crystallizes and lower than the temperature at which the SCR catalyst becomes active.
The supply module is provided between the urea tank and the dosing valve and includes a supply module (“SM”) pump that pressure-feeds the urea solution and a reverting valve that switches between liquid feed channels through which the SM pump feeds the urea solution.
According to the present invention, urea solution can be prevented from adhering to the interior of a dosing valve when the urea solution is not injected through the dosing valve.
The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
In the following, preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
First, an SCR system installed on a vehicle will be described.
As shown in
In order from upstream to downstream of the exhaust gas, the exhaust pipe 102 of the engine E is provided with a diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) 107, a diesel particulate filter (DPF) 108 and the SCR device 103. The DOC 107 is intended to oxidize NO in the exhaust gas discharged from the engine E to produce NO2 to adjust the ratio between NO to NO2 in the exhaust gas in order to improve the denitration efficiency of the SCR device 103. The DPF 108 is intended to collect particular matter (PM) in the exhaust gas.
The exhaust pipe 102 is provided with the dosing valve 104 on the upstream side of the SCR device 103. As described above with reference to
On the upstream side of the dosing valve 104, the exhaust pipe 102 is provided with an exhaust gas temperature sensor 109 that measures the temperature (SCR inlet temperature) of the exhaust gas at an inlet of the SCR device 103. Furthermore, an upstream-side NOX sensor 110 that detects the NOX concentration on the upstream side of the SCR device 103 is provided on the upstream side of the SCR device 103 (on the upstream side of the exhaust gas temperature sensor 109 in this example), and a downstream-side NOX sensor 111 that detects the NOX concentration on the downstream side of the SCR device 103 is provided on the downstream side of the SCR device 103.
The supply module 106 includes an SM pump 112 that pressure-feeds the urea solution, an SM temperature sensor 113 that measures the temperature of the supply module 106 (the temperature of the urea solution flowing through the supply module 106), a urea solution pressure sensor 114 that measures the pressure of the urea solution in the supply module 106 (the pressure on the outlet side of the SM pump 112), and a reverting valve 115 that switches between urea solution flow channels to selectively supply the urea solution in the urea tank 105 to the dosing valve 104 or feed the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 back to the urea tank 105. In this example, the urea solution in the urea tank 105 is supplied to the dosing valve 104 when the reverting valve 115 is turned off, and the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 is fed back to the urea tank 105 when the reverting valve 115 is turned on.
When the reverting valve 115 is set to supply urea solution to the dosing valve 104, the SM pump 112 of the supply module 106 sucks up the urea solution in the urea tank 105 through a liquid feed line (suction line) 116, supplies the urea solution to the dosing valve 104 through a pressure-feed line (pressure line) 117, and feeds any excessive urea solution back to the urea tank 105 through a collection line (back line) 118.
In the key off state (ignition off state or vehicle stop state), the reverting valve 115 is switched to feed the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 back to the urea tank 105, thereby preventing crystallization of urea solution, which causes occurrence of malfunction of the dosing valve 104. The control to feed the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 back to the urea tank 105 is referred to as emptying in this specification.
In emptying, the dosing valve 104 is previously opened, and then the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 is fed back to the urea tank 105, so that the exhaust gas (air) in the exhaust pipe 102 is also sucked into the urea tank 105 via the dosing valve 104.
Next, an example of a configuration of lines in and around the supply module 106 will be described.
As shown in
The reverting valve 115 can switch between the line shown by the solid line in the drawing and the line shown by the dashed line in the drawing, so that both supply of urea solution from the urea tank 105 to the dosing valve 104 and collection of urea solution from the dosing valve 104 to the urea tank 105 can be performed.
The collection line 118 is connected to the pressure-feed line 117 connected to the dosing valve 104 and is configured to feed urea solution back to the urea tank 105.
The line configuration described above is just an example, and the present invention is not limited to the configuration described above.
The urea tank 105 is provided with an SCR sensor 119. The SCR sensor 119 includes a level sensor 120 that measures the liquid level of the urea solution in the urea tank 105, a temperature sensor 121 that measures the temperature of the urea solution in the urea tank 105 and a quality sensor 122 that measures the quality of the urea solution in the urea tank 105. The quality sensor 122 determines the quality of the urea solution in the urea tank 105 by detecting the concentration of the urea solution or whether or not foreign matter is mixed into the urea solution from the propagation velocity of an ultrasonic wave or the electrical conductivity.
A cooling line 123 through which cooling water for cooling the engine E circulates is connected to the urea tank 105 and the supply module 106. The cooling line 123 passes through the urea tank 105 so that heat exchange occurs between the cooling water flowing through the cooling line 123 and the urea solution in the urea tank 105. The cooling line 123 also passes through the supply module 106 so that heat exchange occurs between the cooling water flowing through the cooling line 123 and the urea solution in the supply module 106.
The cooling line 123 is provided with a tank heater valve (coolant valve) 124 that selectively supplies or does not supply the cooling water to the urea tank 105 and the supply module 106. The cooling line 123 is also connected to the dosing valve 104. However, the dosing valve 104 is configured to be supplied with the cooling water whether the tank heater valve 124 is open or closed. Although not shown in the simplified configuration shown in
As shown in
Furthermore, output signal lines to the tank heater valve 124, the SM pump 112 and the reverting valve 115 of the supply module 106, the dosing valve 104, a heater of the upstream-side NOX sensor 110 and a heater of the downstream-side NOX sensor 111 are connected to the DCU 126. Signal exchange between the DCU 126 and each component can occur through the individual signal line or via a controller area network (CAN).
The DCU 126 is configured to estimate the amount of NOX in the exhaust gas based on a signal indicative of an engine parameter from the ECM 125 and the exhaust gas temperature from the exhaust gas temperature sensor 109 and determine the amount of urea solution to be injected through the dosing valve 104 based on the estimated amount of NOX in the exhaust gas. Furthermore, when the determined amount of urea solution is injected through the dosing valve 104, the DCU 126 is configured to control the dosing valve 104 based on the detection value from the upstream-side NOX sensor 110 to adjust the amount of urea solution injected through the dosing valve 104.
The SCR system 100 is normally configured to close the dosing valve 104 when the SCR catalyst temperature (exhaust gas temperature) is lower than the temperature at which an SCR catalyst becomes active (C ° C.) and permits injection of urea solution through the dosing valve 104 when the exhaust gas temperature rises sufficiently beyond the temperature at which the SCR catalyst becomes active. A sensor that directly measures the SCR catalyst temperature is not typically provided, so that the measurement value of the exhaust gas temperature sensor 109 is used as the SCR catalyst temperature. That is, the SCR catalyst temperature is the same as the exhaust gas temperature.
When injection of urea solution through the dosing valve 104 is permitted, the urea solution is appropriately injected according to the amount of NOX in the exhaust gas. When urea solution is injected through the dosing valve 104 in this way, the urea solution in the urea tank 105 that is not at high temperature is supplied to the dosing valve 104 by the supply module 106, so that the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 does not rise in temperature and crystallize.
However, when the exhaust gas temperature is lower than the temperature at which the SCR catalyst becomes active, injection of urea solution through the dosing valve 104 does not occur. Since urea solution crystallizes at temperatures from A ° C. to B ° C., if the exhaust gas temperature is equal to or higher than A ° C. and lower than C ° C., for example, the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 exposed to the heat of the exhaust gas at that temperature can crystallize and cause malfunction of the dosing valve 104.
To solve the problem, the SCR system 100 according to the present invention is provided with a fixation prevention system that opens the dosing valve 104 and controls the supply module 106 to feed the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 back to the urea tank 105 to prevent fixation of urea solution to the interior of the dosing valve 104 when the exhaust gas temperature is equal to or higher than the temperature at which urea solution crystallizes even if the exhaust gas temperature is lower than the temperature at which the SCR catalyst becomes active. The fixation prevention system is provided in the DCU 126.
The fixation prevention system is configured to monitor the measurement value of the exhaust gas temperature sensor 109, and opens the dosing valve 104, switches the reverting valve 115 of the supply module 106 and activates the SM pump 112 to forcedly perform emptying (forced emptying) if the measurement value is equal to or higher than the temperature at which the urea solution crystallizes and lower than the SCR catalyst becomes active.
In other words, the fixation prevention system determines whether or not the exhaust gas temperature is equal to or higher than the temperature at which the urea solution crystallizes and lower than the temperature at which the urea solution is injected by monitoring the measurement value of the exhaust gas temperature sensor 109, and performs forced emptying if the exhaust gas temperature is equal to or higher than the temperature at which the urea solution crystallizes and lower than the temperature at which the urea solution is injected.
This operation can remove the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 before the urea solution crystallizes, so that the urea solution can be prevented from crystallizing in the dosing valve 104 and adhering to the interior of the dosing valve 104.
As described above, the SCR system according to the present invention provided with the fixation prevention system can prevent fixation of urea solution to the interior of the dosing valve 104 when the urea solution is not injected through the dosing valve 104.
According to this embodiment, the fixation prevention system is configured to perform forced emptying when the exhaust gas temperature is equal to or higher than the temperature at which the urea solution crystallizes and lower than the SCR catalyst becomes active. However, instead of performing forced emptying, the fixation prevention system may be configured to intermittently opens the dosing valve 104 (every 3 minutes, for example) to discharge a small amount of urea solution from the dosing valve 104 at predetermined time intervals. This operation can also discharge the urea solution in the dosing valve 104 before the urea solution crystallizes, so that the urea solution can be prevented from crystallizing in the dosing valve 104 and adhering to the interior of the dosing valve 104.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-119713 | May 2010 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2011/061212 | 5/16/2011 | WO | 00 | 11/21/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/148809 | 12/1/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20070283685 | Ripper | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20090101656 | Leonard | Apr 2009 | A1 |
20100071349 | Kitazawa | Mar 2010 | A1 |
20100122521 | Sun | May 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2000-303826 | Oct 2000 | JP |
2003-222019 | Aug 2003 | JP |
2005-113688 | Apr 2005 | JP |
2005-273503 | Oct 2005 | JP |
2006-342735 | Dec 2006 | JP |
2008-101564 | May 2008 | JP |
2009-97479 | May 2009 | JP |
Entry |
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Naohisa et.al. JP2005273503—machine translation. |
International Search Report of Corresponding PCT Application PCT/JP2011/061212 mailed Jul. 26, 2011. |
Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 2009-097479, Published May 7, 2009. |
Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 2000-303826, Published Oct. 31, 2000. |
Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 2008-101564, Published May 1, 2008. |
Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 2006-342735, Published Dec. 21, 2006. |
Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 2005-273503, Published Oct. 6, 2005. |
Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 2005-113688, Published Apr. 28, 2005. |
Patent Abstracts of Japan, Publication No. 2003-222019, Published Aug. 8, 2003. |
Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority mailed Jul. 26, 2011 in corresponding International Application No. PCT/JP2011/061212. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130071291 A1 | Mar 2013 | US |