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Technical Paper

The Impact of Sulfur Poisoning on NOx-Storage Catalysts in Gasoline Applications

2005-04-11
2005-01-1113
A commercial NOx-storage catalyst for gasoline applications containing Ba/CeO2/Al2O3, platinum, palladium and rhodium has been sulfated on the engine bench at 390 and 510°C with a nominal exposure of 1.3 g sulfur/liter catalyst. Lower exposures proved too low to have a notable impact on the catalytic performance. At 390°C the sulfur is completely adsorbed while at 510°C only partial adsorption is being observed. Sulfur is mainly deposited at the catalyst inlet thereby shielding the downstream region. Desulfation on synthetic gas bench at 700°C leads to a partial removal of the sulfur. The residual sulfur is more evenly distributed along the length of the catalyst compared to the sulfur profile in the sulfated catalyst. This causes an improvement of the NOx-activity at the inlet side while the NOx-performance at the outlet side decreases after desulfation.
Technical Paper

Performances and Durability of DPF (Diesel Particulate Filter) Tested on a Fleet of Peugeot 607 Taxis: Final results

2004-03-08
2004-01-0073
In order to asses the durability of DPF, a study has been performed in order to study the evolution of several taxis (Peugeot 607) and the performance of this after-treatment systems over 80,000 km mileage in hard urban driving conditions, which corresponds to the recommended mileage before the first DPF maintenance (this periodicity is applied on the first generation of DPF technology launched in 2000). More specifically, the following evaluations are being performed at regular intervals (around 20 000 km): Regulated gaseous pollutant emissions on NEDC cycle (New European Driving Cycle) Particulate emissions, by mass measurement on NEDC but also by particle number and size measurement with SMPS (Scanning Mobility Particle Sizer) technique on NEDC and on unconventional steady-state running points.
Technical Paper

Performances and Durability of DPF (Diesel Particulate Filter) Tested on a Fleet of Peugeot 607 Taxis First and Second Test Phases Results

2002-10-21
2002-01-2790
The use of Diesel engines has strongly increased during the last years and now represents 30% of the sales in Europe and up to 50% of the number of cars in circulation for some countries. This success is linked not only to the economical aspect of the use of such vehicles, but also to the recent technological improvements of these engines. The new technical solutions (high pressure direct injection, turbocharging…) have indeed allowed the increase of these engine performances while decreasing their fuel consumption, pollutant emissions and noise level. From an environmental point of view, Diesel engines are nevertheless penalized by their particulate and NOx emissions. The study and the treatment of the particulate, highly criticized for their potential impact on health, are the subject of numerous works of characterization and developments. PSA Peugeot-Citroën has recently launched its particulate filter technology on several types of vehicles.
Technical Paper

Present Day Diesel Engine Pollutant Emissions: Proposed Model for Refinery Bases Impact

2000-06-19
2000-01-1852
Air quality improvement, especially in urban areas, is one of the major concerns for the coming years. For this reason, car manufacturers, equipment manufacturers and refiners have been exploring development avenues to comply with increasingly severe anti-pollution requirements. In such a context, the identification of the most promising improvement options is essential. A research program, carried out by IFP (Institut Français du Pétrole), and supported by FSH (Fonds de Soutien aux Hydrocarbures), IFP, PSA-Peugeot-Citroën, Renault and Renault VI (Véhicules Industriels), has been built to study this point. It is a four years programme with different steps which will focus on new engine technologies: some of them are going to be marketed very soon (gasoline direct injection car engine, and diesel common rail injection car and truck engines) to anticipate the Euro 3 (2000) and the Euro 4 (2005) emissions specifications. The original work reported here is part of this research.
Technical Paper

Passenger Car Serial Application of a Particulate Filter System on a Common Rail Direct Injection Diesel Engine

2000-03-06
2000-01-0473
1 Although combustion system improvements allow extremely low level of particulate (EURO 4 particulate level is already achieved) the particulate filter appears to be the only solution to reduce solid particulate emission by two to three order of magnitude over the whole size range starting from 10 nm. This is the reason why an active particulate filter system has been developed. The major issue was to fill in the gap between particulate regeneration temperature (550°C) and the naturally low exhaust gas temperature of modern DI diesel engine (150°C to 200°C in city driving conditions). This low exhaust gas temperature is the result of overall efficiency improvement to reduce fuel consumption.
Technical Paper

European Programme on Emissions, Fuels and Engine Technologies (EPEFE) - FUEL AND EXHAUST GAS ANALYSIS METHODOLOGY

1996-05-01
961070
This paper describes how the analytical methodology for fuels and exhaust gases was selected and developed for the experimental sectors of the EPEFE study. It covers the selection of standard test methods for fuels analysis and addresses how round-robin exercises in non-standard areas of fuels analysis were designed, organised, monitored and reviewed, and then used to define the approach to (and the scope of) the speciated fuel analyses. The paper also addresses how the exhaust gas analysis was designed in relation to emissions testing methodology. The means used to evaluate and, where necessary, optimise the exhaust gas speciation capabilities of participating laboratories, and in which round-robin activities were a key element, are also explained.
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