An experimental and numerical study on effects of exhaust gas temperature and flow rate on deposit formation in Urea-Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system of modern automobiles
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Date
2017
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
Urea Water Solution (UWS) is injected to generate NH<inf>3</inf> in Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system of modern automobiles. Thermal and fluid dynamic conditions such as temperature and Reynolds number of the flow favors ammonia generation in terms of heat transfer to UWS droplets by forced convection. During extremely cold weather conditions and low exhaust temperatures, the overdosing of UWS results in deposits of urea and its byproducts. As deposit depletion changes the stoichiometry of NO<inf>x</inf>/NH<inf>3</inf>, any predictive method becomes complementary to experimental studies on deposit formation. In the present work, we experimentally investigated deposit formation and its rate by a newer concept of usage of Stainless Steel (SS) foils considering temperature and flow rate as variables. According to numerical results, the droplet evaporation of UWS decreases as flow rate increases. For a fixed rate of UWS quantity of deposits decrease with increase in temperature and flow rate. Accordingly, structural changes are observed. Numerical values of time dependent deposit formation found slightly superior to the experimental values. The study revealed that deposit areas at low temperatures are comparable to numerical values. Phenomenological model is proposed to find deposit conversion factor for low temperatures (150–250°C), which helps in tuning of UWS dosage strategy to prevent NH<inf>3</inf> slip. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd
Description
Keywords
Byproducts, Deposits, Drops, Flow rate, Fluid dynamics, Heat transfer, Metabolism, Reynolds number, Stainless steel, Temperature, Thyristors, Urea, Deposit formation, Exhaust gas temperatures, Exhaust temperature, Experimental and numerical studies, Phenomenological modeling, Selective catalytic reduction systems, Simulation, Urea-selective catalytic reduction, Selective catalytic reduction
Citation
Applied Thermal Engineering, 2017, 111, , pp. 1211-1231
