Abstract
Performance improvements of automotive catalytic converters can be achieved by improving the flow distribution of exhaust gases within the substrate. The flow distribution is often assumed to be adequately described by measurements obtained from steady flow rigs. An experimental study was carried out to characterise the flow distribution through the substrate of a close-coupled catalytic converter for both steady and pulsating conditions on a flow rig and on a motored engine. Computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations were also performed. On the flow rig, the flow from each port was activated separately discharging air to different regions of the substrate. This resulted in a high degree of flow maldistribution. For steady flow maldistribution increased with Reynolds number. Pulsating the flow resulted in a reduction in flow maldistribution. Different flow distributions were observed on the motored engine when compared to composite maps derived from the rig. For the engine study significantly more flow activity was observed at the periphery of the substrate, each port contributing to the net flow. The results suggest that strong port interactions occur. CFD simulations showed qualitative agreement with measurements but underestimated the flow maldistribution.
Publisher statement: Copyright © 2001 SAE International. This paper is posted on this site with permission from SAE International and is for viewing only. It may not be stored on any additional repositories or retrieval systems. Further use or distribution is not permitted without permission from SAE.
Original language | English |
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Publisher | SAE |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2001 |
Publication series
Name | SAE Technical Papers |
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Publisher | SAE |
Bibliographical note
Also presented at SAE Spring Fuels & Lubricants Meeting & Exhibition, May 2002, Reno, NV, USA, Session: General Emissions (Part A)Copyright © 2001 SAE International. This paper is posted on this site with permission from SAE International and is for viewing only. It may not be stored on any additional repositories or retrieval systems. Further use or distribution is not permitted without permission from SAE.
Keywords
- automotive
- simulation and modelling
- computational fluid dynamics
- emissions
- tests and testing