PECM Issue 17 2015 | Page 17

Transient Emissions Challenges T he drive for improved fuel economy has spawned development of a new generation of turbocharged GDI engines. Simultaneously, emissions legislation requires ever lower emissions levels and since 2014 includes a Particle Number constraint which will tighten further in 2017. Two common scenarios arise in which there is a significant and disadvantageous effect on emissions. Initial emissions calibration of engines and their aftertreatment systems is undertaken at various representative steady state points, but it is in investigating transients during drive cycles where the use of fast-response emissions analyzers becomes crucial. Recent studies at Cambustion tested a 2.0-litre turbocharged GDI engine on a variety of drive cycles. Data from a WLTC Class 3 (intended for the European and Japanese markets) are discussed here. Although the vehicle is unlikely to have been developed for this cycle (it is Euro 6 compliant), identification of features of interest can show changes that could be used to ensure compliance. The longer cycle duration (WLTC is 1798s, NEDC is 1198s) means that the cold start is less significant for the total cycle emissions- the aftertreatment is working for a greater proportion of the cycle. Attention to the transient operation which dominates the rest of the cycle is therefore of increased importance, reinforced by the higher loads and more aggressive accelerations. Cambustion fast-response analyzers for HC, NOx, CO&CO2 and particle number / size were used. Several features of interest were identified by the fast analyzers, the most significant one being the effects of blow-through on NOx and Particle Number. Effects of Blow-through on Tailpipe NO Emissions on a 2.0L Euro 6 Turbocharged GDI Engine Blow-through causes the exhaust gas presented to the aftertreatment to become overall lean, even though combustion in the cylinder was close to stoichiometry. This produces low PN (since the combustion lambda remains well controlled) but can lead to NOx breakthrough at the tailpipe. The phenomenon of blow-through (over-scavenging) has been observed in other boosted GDI engines. During valve overlap, and when significant boost pressure exists, intake air may pass straight through the exhaust valve. True combustion lambda and measured exhaust (aftertreatment) lambda diverge. The level of blow-through depends on many factors, including boost pr essure, engine speed and valve timing (which is usually variable depending on load). emissions legislation requires ever lower emissions levels and since 2014 includes a Particle Number constraint which will tighten further in 2017. Effects of Blow-through on Tailpipe PN Emissions on a 2.0L Euro 6 Turbocharged GDI Engine Alternatively short-duration spikes of PN can appear during hard accelerations and gear changes, despite a warm engine. The exhaust lambda does not indicate particularly rich conditions, but the fast CO analyzer identifies that combustion lambda was rich. The difference between combustion lambda and exhaust lambda is explained by blow-through. The use of fast analyzers to identify such problems and to help assess calibration improvements is likely to be indispensable as more transient drive cycles are adopted for legislative purposes. www.cambustion.com Issue 17 PECM 17