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Technical Paper

A Fuel Vapor Model (FVSMOD) for Evaporative Emissions System Design and Analysis

1998-10-19
982644
A fuel vapor system model (FVSMOD) has been developed to simulate vehicle evaporative emission control system behavior. The fuel system components incorporated into the model include the fuel tank and pump, filler cap, liquid supply and return lines, fuel rail, vent valves, vent line, carbon canister and purge line. The system is modeled as a vented system of liquid fuel and vapor in equilibrium, subject to a thermal environment characterized by underhood and underbody temperatures and heat transfer parameters assumed known or determined by calibration with experimental liquid temperature data. The vapor/liquid equilibrium is calculated by simple empirical equations which take into account the weathering of the fuel, while the canister is modeled as a 1-dimensional unsteady absorptive and diffusive bed. Both fuel and canister submodels have been described in previous publications. This paper presents the system equations along with validation against experimental data.
Technical Paper

Activated Carbon Canister Performance During Diurnal Cycles: An Experimental and Modeling Evaluation

1997-05-01
971651
A vehicle's evaporative emission control system is continuously working, even when the vehicle is not running, due to generation of vapors from the fuel tank during ambient temperature variations. Diurnal temperature cycles cause the fuel tank to breathe the fuel vapor in and out, and thus the activated carbon canister is constantly loading and purging the hydrocarbon vapors. This paper discusses a study undertaken at Ford to evaluate the relationship between carbon canister condition and fuel tank vapor generation during diurnal cycles. The results of an extensive set of experiments are presented, and the data from these experiments are compared to the output of a fuel vapor system model also developed at Ford. Key parameters relating to the migration of hydrocarbons during the experimental conditions studied, including initial canister condition, canister volume, and canister geometry, are discussed.
Technical Paper

Carbon Canister Development for Enhanced Evaporative Emissions and On-Board Refueling

1997-02-24
970312
Automotive fuel vapor emissions that would otherwise evaporate into the atmosphere are being captured in activated carbon vapor storage canisters. Fuel vapor is loaded into the canisters via a direct connection to the fuel tank vapor dome. Hydrocarbons are desorbed from the activated carbon into the engine combustion cylinders using engine intake vacuum. The carbon canister capacity requirements have increased in recent years in order to meet both Enhanced Evaporative Emission regulations and the Clean Air Act emission requirements for On-board Refueling Vapor Recovery (ORVR). The higher capacity requirements have generated the need for larger volume canisters that can meet the emission requirements and still be designed within the space and packaging limits of the vehicle application. This paper describes the simultaneous engineering approach used at Ford Motor Company to design a large volume cylindrical shaped carbon canister.
Technical Paper

Carbon Canister Modeling for Evaporative Emissions: Adsorption and Thermal Effects

1996-05-01
961210
A one-dimensional carbon canister adsorption model (CANMOD) has been developed to assist in the prediction of the performance of carbon bed canisters in vehicle evaporative emissions control systems. The model accounts for mass transfer and transient thermal phenomena, both of which are found to be essential in accurately describing canister behavior. The model assumes the vapor above the carbon to be in equilibrium with the adsorbed mass while the local temperature is determined by the dynamic balance between the heat of adsorption, carbon heat capacity and heat loss to ambient. The results of the model compare well with laboratory data on a 1L canister under load and purge conditions typical of vehicle operation. Variables investigated include: load level, feedgas concentration, and purge rate. The model accurately predicts the hydrocarbon mass adsorbed by the canisters, as well as breakthrough times, and hydrocarbon removal rates.
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