The Effect of EGR System Response Time on NOx Feedgas Emissions during Engine Transients

850133

2/1/1985

Authors
Abstract
Content
Quantitative measurements were made of NOx feedgas emissions during transient engine operation as the response time of an EGR system was progressively-degraded. For a simple acceleration-cruise-deceleration engine speed/torque versus time trajectory, it was found that the NOx emissions were higher during acceleration and lower during deceleration than corresponding values predicted from steady-state mapping data. The magnitude of the differences, as well as the total mass of NOx integrated over the speed/torque trajectory, all increased as the EGR response time was increased. Using a simple dynamic EGR model, NOx feedgas emissions were predicted for engine operation with a production EGR system over a 128 second portion of the FTP CVS cycle. The NOx feedgas predictions were shown to be in excellent agreement with actual emission measurements.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/850133
Pages
12
Citation
Throop, M., Cook, J., and Hamburg, D., "The Effect of EGR System Response Time on NOx Feedgas Emissions during Engine Transients," SAE Technical Paper 850133, 1985, https://doi.org/10.4271/850133.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
2/1/1985
Product Code
850133
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English