Effects of Engine Operating Conditions on Catalytic Converter Temperature in an SI Engine

2002-01-1677

05/06/2002

Event
Spring Fuels & Lubricants Meeting & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
To meet stringent emission standards, a considerable amount of development work is necessary to ensure suitable efficiency and durability of catalyst systems. The main challenge is to reduce the engine cold-start emissions. Close-coupled catalyst (CCC) provides fast light-off time by utilizing the energy in the exhaust gas. However, if some malfunction occurred during engine operation and the catalyst temperature exceeds 1050°C, the catalytic converter becomes deactivated and shows poor conversion efficiency.
Close-coupled catalyst temperature was investigated under various engine operating conditions. All of the experiments were conducted with a 1.0L SI engine at 1500-4000 rpm. The engine was operated at no load to full load conditions. Exhaust gas temperature and catalyst temperature were measured as a function of lambda value (0.8-1.2), ignition timing (BTDC 30°-ATDC 30°) and misfire rates (0-28%). It was found that ignition retard and misfire can result in the deactivation of the catalytic converter, which eventually leads the drastic thermal aging of the converter. Significant reduction in light-off time can be achieved with proper control of ignition retard and misfire, which can reduce cold-start HC emissions as well. Exhaust gas temperature was also predicted according to engine speed, air/fuel ratio and ignition timing to complement the experimental results.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2002-01-1677
Pages
12
Citation
Lee, S., Bae, C., Lee, Y., and Han, T., "Effects of Engine Operating Conditions on Catalytic Converter Temperature in an SI Engine," SAE Technical Paper 2002-01-1677, 2002, https://doi.org/10.4271/2002-01-1677.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 6, 2002
Product Code
2002-01-1677
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English