The present invention relates to a diesel particulate trap. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method and apparatus for regenerating a diesel particulate trap using microwave radiation and materials with self-mode-stirring properties.
Increased government regulation has reduced the allowable levels of particulates generated by diesel engines. The particulates can generally be characterized as a soot that is captured by particulate filters or traps. Present particulate filters or traps contain a separation medium with tiny pores that capture particles. As trapped material accumulates in the particulate trap, resistance to flow through the particulate trap increases, generating backpressure. The particulate trap must then be regenerated to burn off the particulates/soot in the particulate trap to reduce the backpressure and allow exhaust flow through the particulate trap. Past practices of regenerating a particulate trap utilized an energy source such as a burner or electric heater to generate combustion in the particulates. Particulate combustion in a diesel particulate trap by these past practices has been found to be difficult to control and may result in an excessive temperature rise.
Presently, conventional microwaves and microwave radiation are used in a variety of settings, including conventional microwave ovens. Heating by a microwave oven can be accomplished with a nonresonant cavity which is not designed with the purpose of exciting any particular microwave mode pattern. The field distribution within the nonresonant cavity will naturally exhibit standing waves, such that the microwave power absorption in a material exposed to the microwaves will be nonuniform. Analogous problems with using microwaves to heat a particulate trap in automotive applications also exist. Only portions of a microwave particulate trap may be heated when exposed to microwaves, leading to thermal runaway and less than satisfactory combustion of particulates in the particulate trap. This nonuniform heating can be minimized by the use of multiple microwave frequencies and/or mode-stirring using mechanical systems such as fan blades to cause a standing wave pattern to change in time in the cavity. Mechanical mode-stirring and the use of multiple microwave frequencies are not practical solutions in automotive microwave heating applications.
The present invention is a method and apparatus for regenerating an automotive diesel particulate trap using microwave energy. The present invention allows for the absorption of microwaves in select locations in a particulate trap such as near an inlet channel or end plug of a particulate trap to initiate regeneration and remove particulate build up. By absorbing microwaves in select locations, a relatively small amount of energy initiates the particle combustion that regenerates the particulate trap. The exotherm from the combustion of a small amount of particulates is leveraged to burn a larger number of particulates.
The present invention further utilizes “self-mode-stirring” (SMS). To understand the concept of SMS, an analysis of microwave propagation will be described in the following examples.
Propagation of the Electric (Ex) and Magnetic (Hy) components of a microwave can be described by the following equations:
Ex=E0eiωte−γz (1a)
Hy=H0eiωte−γz (1b)
where E0 is equal to the amplitude of the electric field, H0 is equal to the amplitude of the magnetic field, ω represents the angular frequency, t is the time, γ describes the attenuation of the electromagnetic wave as is propagates through a sample, and z is the position of wave along the propagation direction. The attenuation generated by the parameter γ is related to the complex material values for permittivity (ε*) and permeability (μ*) by the following equation:
γ=iω(ε*μ)1/2 (2)
The complex permittivity and permeability represent the dielectric and magnetic coupling of the material to incident microwave energy. The amount of microwave absorption and the pattern of cavity resonances are dependent on the permittivity and permeability. The complex permittivity and permeability have a real and imaginary part as shown in the following equations:
ε=ε′+iε″ 3(a)
μ=μ′+iμ″ 3(b)
The imaginary parts of the permittivity (ε″) and permeability (μ″) are responsible for the absorption of microwaves that lead to the heating of a material. These imaginary parts should be as large as possible in comparison to their real parts to generate effective absorption and heating. The figure of importance for a material, with respect to microwave heating, is a simple ratio of the imaginary part to the real part of the permittivity and permeability, known as the loss tangent. By selecting materials that have relatively large loss tangents, microwave absorption will be increased (as compared to materials with small loss tangents such as cordierite, the material from which a trap is made) in a particulate trap coated with these large-loss tangent materials. The electric and magnetic loss tangents, tan δe and tan δm, are described by the following equations:
tan δe=ε′/ε″ 4(a)
tan δm=μ′/μ″ 4(b)
The present invention includes a particulate trap placed in the exhaust flow of a diesel engine. The particulate trap includes SMS microwave-absorbing materials configured to absorb microwaves in selected locations in the particulate trap. A microwave source may be operatively coupled to a wave guide, and a focus ring may be used to direct the microwaves to the microwave-absorbing materials. The microwave-absorbing material generates heat in response to incident microwaves to ignite and burn off particulates. Materials substantially transparent to microwaves are preferably used for the basic construction of the particulate trap and other areas in the particulate trap where it would be inefficient to absorb microwave energy.
In the present invention, the delivery of microwaves to the particulate trap is configured such that the microwaves are incident upon the microwave-absorbing material. By strategically locating the microwave-absorbing materials, microwaves may be used efficiently at the locations they are most needed to initiate the burn-off of particulates.
The use of microwaves in the present invention further allows the frequency of particulate trap regeneration to be precisely controlled. The present invention may schedule regenerations based on empirically-generated particulate trap operation data and/or utilize a pressure sensor to determine when the particulate trap requires a regeneration.
Materials such as mineral cordierite are used to make the basic structure of a diesel particulate trap. Cordierite does not have large enough loss tangents to efficiently utilize microwave radiation in the regeneration of particulate traps. Cordierite has a relatively small loss tangent at the common magnetron microwave frequency of 2.45 GHz and changes little with temperature. Consequently, cordierite particulate traps tend to be virtually transparent to incident microwaves. The present invention includes materials with relatively high-loss tangents coated to the interior surfaces of a particulate trap. The coating materials will have a loss tangent that varies with temperature to remove undesirable static hot and cold regions in the particulate trap. As the material loss tangent varies with temperature, so will the mode pattern in the microwave cavities of the particulate trap, producing self-mode stirring (SMS).
The present invention includes materials with SMS properties that also avoid thermal runaway conditions. This is accomplished by materials exhibiting an initial increase in loss tangent to a critical temperature (Curie temperature), followed by a sharp decrease in loss tangent above the Curie temperature. Materials exhibiting these properties include ferroelectric and/or ferro-or ferrimagnetic oxides. These materials encompass compositions that have an initially high loss tangent that increases up to the Curie temperature. Beyond the Curie temperature, the loss tangent decreases sharply due to the inability of the microwaves to induce either electric or magnetic polarizations in the material. The preferred material will exhibit a relatively high electrical resistivity at the Curie temperature.
a and 3b are plots illustrating initial permeability versus temperature.
As illustrated in
By choosing a particulate trap material or material coating with the appropriate Curie temperature and resistivity and through selective coating of the sample (graded thickness, hybrid coating), uniform heating of a sample with low power microwaves (≦1 kW) to any target temperature can be achieved in a particulate trap 10.
It is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the exact construction illustrated and described above, but that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040011024 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |