The present invention relates to diesel engine exhaust after-treatment systems and methods for reducing emissions. More specifically, the invention relates to systems and methods for inducing operator correction of faults relating to operation of SCR technology in the after-treatment process.
Diesel engines produce various undesirable combustion byproducts including nitrogen oxides (NOx) and particulate matter (PM). As these byproducts have a negative effect on the environment, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has imposed various regulations over the years designed to reduce their emission. These regulations apply to off-road diesel engines and stationary engines. Recently, the EPA graduated its emissions regulations for large stationary generator (genset) systems to the Tier 4 Interim (Tier 4i) requirement, which will be followed in 2015 by the even more stringent Tier 4 Final (Tier 4F) requirement. One technology for treating the exhaust stream from diesel engines in a system designed to meet these requirements is Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR).
SCR is an after-treatment technology designed to permit NOx reduction reactions to take place in an oxidizing atmosphere, thereby chemically washing out the NOx from the exhaust before the exhaust is released into the environment. In general, an automotive grade urea-based solution (called diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) in North America) is injected into the exhaust upstream of a catalyst. The DEF decomposes to form ammonia (NH3) which, with the SCR catalyst, reacts with the NOx and converts it into nitrogen, water, and small amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2), all natural components of air.
As indicated above, SCR technology is an after-treatment process. If the SCR system is not functioning properly, unacceptable emission levels will result as the engine continues to produce NOx. Thus, while the technology is effective, it is only as effective as the approach implemented for maintaining optimum operation. One challenge to ensuring an SCR system continuously functions as intended is addressing the need to maintain the DEF supply at an acceptable level. Engine maintenance personnel need to be alerted when DEF supplies are low so they can take action to refill the DEF tank. Moreover, in some instances engine operators intentionally substitute DEF with a watered down version (or even pure water) to reduce costs. Unless a sufficiently high quality DEF is used, the NOx removal function of the SCR system is degraded or even eliminated, and the result is excessively high emissions. Additionally, engine operators may attempt to tamper with or skip required maintenance on certain components of the after-treatment system and thus override emission reduction and safety functions. Consequently, the EPA has issued guidelines requiring strategies for inducing engine operators to maintain proper function of the Tier 4 after-treatment system, such as maintaining the proper DEF supplies necessary to keep the SCR systems functional and to refrain from intentional tampering.
In one embodiment, the present disclosure provider a method of inducing proper operation of a diesel engine exhaust after-treatment system of a genset employing SCR technology, including the steps of monitoring the system to detect a first fault condition representing one of a DEF level fault, a DEF quality fault, and a tampering fault, activating a trigger event indicator in response to detecting the first fault condition, the trigger event indicator providing an indicium to an operator of the presence of the first fault condition, activating an inducement event indicator in response to activating the trigger event indicator, the inducement event indicator providing an indicium to the operator that the engine will be shut down if the first fault condition is not addressed within a first predetermined time period, shutting down the engine when the first fault condition is not addressed within the first predetermined time period, initiating a repeat offense timer which increments through a predetermined repeat offense time period, reactivating the inducement event indicator in response to detecting the first fault condition for a second time during the repeat offense time period, the reactivated inducement event indicator providing an indicium to the operator that the engine will be shut down if the first fault condition is not addressed within a second predetermined time period which is less than the first predetermined time period, and shutting down the engine when the first fault condition is not addressed within the second predetermined time period.
In another embodiment, the present disclosure provides an SCR exhaust after-treatment system for a diesel engine of a genset, the system configured to induce compliance with emissions regulations and including a level sensor positioned in a DEF tank to detect a level of DEF in the tank, and a controller coupled to the level sensor to receive signals representing a level of DEF in the tank, the controller including a plurality of trigger event indicators, an inducement event indicator, and a communication link coupled to an ECU configured to control operation of the engine. In this embodiment, in response to receipt of a first signal from the level sensor representing a first level of DEF in the tank, the controller sets a DEF level fault, activates a first trigger event indicator, and activates the inducement event indicator to provide a first indicium to an operator of an impending engine shutdown and in response receipt of a second signal from the level sensor representing a second level of DEF in the tank, the second level being lower than the first level, the controller activates the inducement event indicator to provide a second indicium to an operator of an impending engine shutdown, the second indicium being different from the first indicium.
In yet another embodiment, the present disclosure provides an SCR exhaust after-treatment system for a diesel engine of a generator, the system configured to induce compliance with emissions regulations and including an inlet NOx sensor in communication with an inlet exhaust stream from the engine and configured to provide an inlet NOx signal indicating a level of inlet NOx in the inlet exhaust stream, a DEF injector assembly in communication with the inlet exhaust stream for injecting DEF into the inlet exhaust stream thereby creating a dosed exhaust stream, an SCR portion downstream from the DEF injector assembly configured to convert the dosed exhaust stream into an outlet exhaust stream having reduced NOx, an outlet NOx sensor in communication with the outlet exhaust stream and configured to provide an outlet NOx signal indicating a level of outlet NOx in the outlet exhaust stream, and a controller coupled to the inlet NOx sensor to receive the inlet NOx signal and the outlet NOx sensor to receive the outlet NOx signal, the controller including a plurality of trigger event indicators, an inducement event indicator, a timer, and a communication link coupled to an ECU configured to control operation of the engine. In this embodiment, the controller provides a final dosing command to the DEF injector assembly to control injection of DEF into the inlet exhaust stream, the final dosing command being a combination of an initial dosing command based on the inlet NOx signal, and a dosing trim command based on the outlet NOx signal. Additionally, in response to the dosing trim command exceeding a predetermined threshold, the controller sets a DEF quality fault and activates a first trigger event indicator, and in response an outlet NOx signal indicating the level of outlet NOx exceeds a predetermined limit while the first trigger event indicator is active, the controller activates a second trigger event indicator representing a NOx out-of-limits fault, activates the inducement event indicator to provide a first indicium to an operator of an impending engine shutdown, and activates the timer to begin incrementing through a first predetermined time period. If at least one of the DEF quality fault and the NOx out-of-limits fault is not cleared during the first predetermined time period, then the controller sends a shutdown command to the ECU which causes the ECU to shutdown the engine.
In still a further embodiment, the present disclosure provides an SCR exhaust after-treatment system for a diesel engine, the system configured to induce compliance with emissions regulations and including a level sensor positioned within a DEF tank and configured to provide output signals representing a level of DEF within the tank, the output signals having expected characteristics, an outlet NOx sensor positioned at an outlet of the system and configured to provide output signals representing a level of NOx in exhaust at the outlet, the output signals having expected characteristics, and a controller coupled to the level sensor and the outlet NOx sensor to receive the output signals, the controller including a plurality of trigger event indicators, an inducement event indicator, a timer, and a communication link coupled to an ECU configured to control operation of the engine. In this embodiment, in response to receipt of an output signal not having an expected characteristic, the controller sets a tampering fault indicating that the level sensor has been tampered with, activates a first trigger event indicator, activates the inducement event indicator to provide a first indicium to an operator of an impending engine shutdown, and activates the timer to begin incrementing through a first predetermined time period, and if the tampering fault is not cleared during the first predetermined time period, then the controller sends a shutdown command to the ECU which causes the ECU to shutdown the engine.
In another embodiment, the present disclosure provides an SCR exhaust after-treatment system for a diesel engine of a genset, the system configured to induce compliance with emissions regulations and including a plurality of sensors configured to provide output signals representing operational parameters of the system, the output signals having expected characteristics, an outlet NOx sensor positioned at an outlet of the system and configured to provide output signals representing a level of NOx in exhaust at the outlet, and a controller coupled to the plurality of sensors and the outlet NOx sensor to receive the output signals, the controller including a plurality of trigger event indicators, an inducement event indicator, a timer, and a communication link coupled to an ECU configured to control operation of the engine. In this embodiment, in response to receipt from a first sensor of the plurality of sensors of an output signal not having an expected characteristic and receipt of an output signal from the outlet NOx sensor representing a level of NOx that is out-of-limits, the controller sets a tampering fault, activates a first trigger event indicator, sets a NOx out-of-limits fault, activates a second trigger event indicator, activates the inducement event indicator to provide a first indicium to an operator of an impending engine shutdown, and activates the timer to begin incrementing through a first predetermined time period, and if at least one of the tampering fault and the NOx out-of-limits fault is not cleared during the first predetermined time period, then the controller sends a shutdown command to the ECU which causes the ECU to shutdown the engine.
While multiple embodiments are disclosed, still other embodiments of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, which shows and describes illustrative embodiments of the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and detailed description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature and not restrictive.
While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and are described in detail below. The intention, however, is not to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the invention is intended to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
In the process of treating exhaust in the manner generally described above, controller 16 communicates with a variety of components of system 10 such as DEF injector 24, a sensor (described below) used to detect the level of DEF in DEF tank 34, ECU 13, which may communicate with external systems associated with a power grid, and various other components such as pressure and temperature sensors as described herein. In general, controller 16 is a computing, control and communication device that may be implemented in a variety of different configurations as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art. As shown in
Also at time T=0, the status of the inducement event indicator 52 transitions from off to on. In one embodiment, inducement event indicator 52 is provided to one or more operators of engine 12 as a fault message displayed on controller 16 display 38, the activation of a visual indicator 40, and/or the activation of an audio alarm 42. Like trigger event indicator 50, inducement event indicator 52 may also be communicated to engine operators via a network such as a telephone network or the internet in the form of a pager alert, text message, email message or other suitable mode of communication enabled by controller 16. Initially, inducement event indicator 52, if provided in visual form, is provided in one embodiment as a solid display (e.g., a non-changing icon or a continuously lit indicator). This first indicium informs the operator that an inducement event is pending and provides the operator the ability to address the fault condition and clear the trigger event.
When inducement event indicator 52 transitions to solid on, controller 16 initiates a timer which delays the execution of an inducement shutdown (described below) for a predetermined period of time to permit the operator to address the fault condition. In one embodiment, the predetermined time period or warning window is four hours. As indicated on
At time T=4, the status of the inducement shutdown command 54 transitions from off to on if the fault condition is not cleared or an emergency operation mode entered for the genset. This indicates the initiation of a shutdown sequence wherein controller 16 communicates with ECU 13 to cause ECU 13 to disable engine 12, thereby preventing unacceptable levels of pollutant emissions. In other words, if the fault condition persists beyond the warning window, then controller 16 causes a shutdown of engine 12 to prevent continued, improper operation of system 10.
Also at time T=4, repeat offense timer 56 is initiated by controller 16. The repeat offense timer runs for a predetermined period of time (e.g., 40 hours) and controller 16 monitors system 10 during this time to determine whether the same fault condition that activated repeat offense timer 56 occurs again. If so, then controller 16 skips the above sequence and takes repeat offense action in the manner described below.
Referring now to
In one embodiment, level 1 corresponds to a volume of DEF in DEF tank 34 necessary to operate system 10 for a predetermined time period at a maximum DEF dosing rate before reaching the minimum tank volume to enable dosing. In one embodiment, the predetermined time period is four hours. Level 2 corresponds to a volume of DEF in DEF tank 34 necessary to operate system 10 for another, smaller predetermined time period at a maximum DEF dosing rate before reaching the minimum tank volume to enable dosing. In one embodiment, the smaller predetermined time period is one hour. Finally, level 3 corresponds to the minimum volume of DEF in DEF tank 34 to enable dosing. In other words, if the DEF level in DEF tank 34 is permitted to fall below level 3, then system 10 will not be able to inject DEF into the exhaust stream of engine 12, and unacceptable levels of emissions will result.
Referring now to
Another trigger event monitored by system 10 is the quality of the DEF injected into the exhaust stream. In one embodiment, the system 10, includes a DEF quality sensor to test the DEF and assure it is of appropriate quality. In another embodiment, DEF quality is monitored in a “sensorless” manner utilizing the NOx control loop and NOx sensors.
Controller 16 monitors the dosing trim command from feedback controller 76 to determine whether it exceeds a predetermined threshold which, if exceeded, indicates that an excessively large trim dose of DEF is necessary to maintain the outlet NOx below the acceptable level. This condition indicates that the dosing command from feed forward controller 72 is too low, which in turn indicates that the DEF concentration is below the predetermined standard DEF concentration, or that some other major after-treatment fault has occurred (such as, NOx sensor failure, faulty DEF tank level sensor (tank out of DEF), DEF Injector failure, or SCR catalyst failure). It is noted that the other major after-treatment faults can often be confirmed or eliminated as causes for excessive NOx levels by other indicators or sensor readings. When a DEF quality fault is detected, the DEF concentration may be too low as a result of an operator watering down the DEF supply in an effort to reduce costs. When an unacceptable DEF quality is detected in this manner, controller 16 sets a DEF quality fault code which may initiate a shutdown in the manner described below.
Controller 16 also monitors the NOx outlet signal from outlet NOx sensor 75 to determine the level of NOx at the output of SCR section 30. If this NOx outlet signal exceeds a predetermined threshold, then controller 16 sets a NOx out-of-limits fault code. The inducement shutdown command 54 for DEF quality is activated when the DEF quality fault code and the NOx out-of-limits fault code are both set as is further described below.
Referring now to
As indicated above, system 10 also includes an inducement sequence to address tampering with system 10. In particular, controller 16 implements a primary tampering inducement sequence in response to detected tampering with DEF level sensor 60 or outlet NOx sensor 75. Controller 16 is in continuous communication with these sensors and is programmed to expect output signals having certain characteristics and/or falling within a particular range (e.g., voltage, frequency, etc.). When an output signal from one of these sensors is not present, does not have the expected characteristics, and/or falls outside the expected range, controller 16 interprets the condition as a tampering or failure event. Controller 16 also implements a secondary inducement sequence in response to detected tampering or failure of other individual sensors and/or components, but only if the NOx out-of-limits fault code is also set as is further described below. The other sensors and/or components that are monitored by controller 16 for expected output signals include, for example, pressure sensors, temperature sensors, NOx inlet sensor 71, communication components, pump 18 components, and DEF injector 24 components.
With regard to the primary tampering inducement sequence depicted in
At time T=0, controller 16 also sets a NOx out-of-limits fault code in response to detecting unacceptable levels of outlet NOx in the manner described above. As both a DEF quality/tampering fault is set and a NOx out-of-limits fault is set, controller 16 transitions trigger event indicator 50B from off to solid on. Additionally, inducement event indicator 52 is transitioned from off to solid on. As described above with reference to the other inducement sequences, if one or both of the active fault codes is not addressed by time T=3, then controller 16 transitions inducement event indicator 52 from solid on to flashing. If the fault codes have not been cleared by time T=4, then controller 16 initiates inducement shutdown command 54 and begins repeat offense timer 56 in the manner described above.
In this example, both of the fault conditions are cleared at time T=4.1. As such, trigger event indicators 50A, 50B are transitioned from solid on to off, inducement event indicator 52 is transitioned from flashing to off, and inducement shutdown command 54 is again transitioned to off. At this point, system 10 is operating fault free, however, repeat offense timer 56 is still active and incrementing though a repeat offense window of, in one embodiment, forty hours. In one embodiment, repeat offense timer 56 is incremented only when the speed of engine 12 is greater than zero. As shown in the figure, just before time T=X, trigger event indicator 50A is again transitioned from off to solid on in response to another detected fault, which in this example is the same fault or is in the same fault category of the fault that caused activation of trigger event indicator 50A before time T=0. At time T=X, trigger event indicator 50B is also transitioned from off to solid on in response to detection of another NOx out-of-limits fault code. In other words, the same fault codes in this example that were present at time T=0 are also present at time T=X. As such, inducement event indicator 52 is again transitioned from off to solid on. The repeat of the same fault codes at time T=X begins a repeat offense shutdown window of, for example, thirty minutes. Because the recurrence of the same faults represents a repeat offense, in one embodiment the operator is not given as much time to address the faults as was initially provided by the four hour warning window between times TO and T=4. If the fault codes have not been cleared within the shortened repeat offense shutdown window, then at time T=X+0.5, controller 16 sets a repeat offense fault code, initiates inducement shutdown command 54 in the manner described above, and activates a remote shutdown output signal which is communicated to ECU 13.
Referring now to
As shown in
Various modifications and additions can be made to the exemplary embodiments discussed without departing from the scope of the present invention. For example, while the embodiments described above refer to particular features, the scope of this invention also includes embodiments having different combinations of features and embodiments that do not include all of the described features. Accordingly, the scope of the present invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications, and variations as fall within the scope of the claims, together with all equivalents thereof
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