Pulsed discharge regeneration of diesel particulate filters
journal contribution
posted on 2013-10-02, 10:26authored byK. Graupner, J.G.P. Binner, N. Fox, Colin Garner, J.E. Harry, David W. Hoare, Karim S. Ladha, Alex Mason, Andrew Williams
A novel method for the removal of soot from a diesel particulate filter using
pulsed electric discharges is presented. High voltage pulses of between 18 and 25 kV of
nano to microsecond duration and with pulse energies of typically 100–200 mJ were
applied to the filter via a series spark gap. Initial slow erosion of the soot layer proceeds via
the formation of microdischarges. Subsequent spark discharges removed the accumulated
soot more effectively from a larger filter volume. Average soot removal rates of
*0.1–0.2 g/min were achieved at 50 Hz breakdown frequency by optimizing both electrode
geometry and breakdown voltage. On-engine long term testing of the technology
showed soot removal by pulsed discharge to be reliable, efficient and uniform; a total of
100 g of soot was deposited and removed over 18 filter regeneration cycles.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
GRAUPNER, K. ... et al., 2013. Pulsed discharge regeneration of diesel particulate filters. Plasma Chemistry and Plasma Processing, 33 (2), pp. 467 - 477.