Apparatus for Maintaining a Urea Solution in a Liquid State for Treatment of Diesel Exhaust
A system for keeping a reservoir solution of urea in a liquid state at normally sub-freezing temperatures comprising a reservoir tank module having a heater and disposed in a solution storage tank. Solution in the storage tank is heated by passage of heat through the walls of the reservoir tank module which are formed of a hybrid of plastic polymer and metal, preferably a urea-resistant stainless steel, such that the thermal conductivity of the walls is sufficient to liquefy frozen solution in the storage tank in a practical time frame at an acceptable net manufacturing cost for the tank module. The hybrid combination may be formed in any of various arrangements such as, but not limited to, a lower portion formed of metal and an upper portion formed of plastic, or alternating bands and/or strips of metal and plastic. The optimum thicknesses of metal and plastic may be determined conventionally.
The present invention relates to emissions control in compression-ignited and lean burn spark ignition internal combustion engines; more particularly, to systems for injecting urea into the engine exhaust to scavenge nitrogen oxides; and most particularly, to a system for liquefying a storage tank solution of urea at normally sub-freezing urea-solution temperatures.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONTo scavenge oxides of nitrogen (NOx) from the exhaust of an internal combustion engine, such as for example, a compression-ignited (Cl) diesel engine, urea injection systems are commonly in use in the prior art. An aqueous urea solution is injected into the hot exhaust pipe, where urea is hydrolyzed into ammonia ahead of a selective catalytic reduction (SCR) converter. Ammonia reacts with NOx trapped on the catalyst face to form N2, CO2, and H2O, thereby lowering the level of noxious emissions in the exhaust.
A serious problem in the prior art is that at temperatures below about −11° C., the urea solution can freeze. Thus, a thermal heating system and method are required to thaw the solid solution into a liquid solution (or to keep the solution from freezing) to permit a pump to draw solution for delivery into the exhaust pipe.
A typical prior art urea supply system comprises a relatively small reservoir tank module from which liquid urea solution is dispensed into a diesel engine exhaust system, and a larger storage tank in which the tank module is immersed. The tank module contains a resistance heater that can liquefy suitable quantities of solution in a short time, as is required to meet government air pollution standards. Solution in the storage tank is heated by transfer of heat through the walls of the heated tank module. It is an important operating requirement that the storage tank be able to re-supply the tank module within a short time after starting of the engine.
In prior art systems when the solution in the storage tank is frozen, meeting this requirement can be difficult because of limited heat flow through walls of the tank module, which typically is formed of a plastic polymer having relatively low thermal conductivity. It is known to have substituted an all-metal tank module, which has satisfactory thermal conductivity, but the corrosive nature of a urea solution dictates forming the tank module of urea-resistant stainless steel, making this approach cost-prohibitive.
What is needed in the art is an improved reservoir tank module having thermal conductivity sufficient to liquefy frozen urea solution in a practical time frame and having an acceptable net manufacturing cost.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide a reliable flow of liquid urea solution at ambient temperatures below the freezing point of the solution at an acceptable net manufacturing cost of a urea supply system.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONBriefly described, a system for keeping a reservoir solution of urea in a liquid state at normally sub-freezing temperatures comprises a reservoir tank module disposed in a storage tank. The reservoir tank module preferably includes a level sensing apparatus, inlet and outlet ports for supplying and withdrawing urea solution, and at least one heating element. The walls of the reservoir tank module are preferably immersed in urea solution contained in the storage tank, which solution is heated by passage of heat through the walls of the reservoir tank module.
In accordance with the present invention, the walls of the reservoir tank module are formed of a hybrid of plastic polymer and metal, preferably a urea-resistant stainless steel, such that the thermal conductivity of the walls is sufficient to liquefy frozen urea solution in the storage tank in a practical time frame and at an acceptable net manufacturing cost for the reservoir tank module.
The hybrid combination may be formed in any of various arrangements such as, but not limited to, a lower portion formed of metal and an upper portion formed of plastic; and a pattern of alternating bands and/or strips of metal and plastic. The metal may be exposed to solution within the reservoir tank module and/or the storage tank; or the metal may be shielded by plastic at either or both locations. The reservoir tank module may be formed by any convenient forming process such as, but not limited to, forming of the metal components as by stamping from sheet stock of powdered metal casting followed by joining or overmolding of the plastic components onto the metal components. For any given application, dependent in part upon the expected climatic extremes during use and the costs of materials, the optimum thermal transfer areas and thicknesses of metal and plastic may be determined conventionally as by computer modeling and/or simple experimentation.
The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The exemplifications set out herein illustrate currently-preferred embodiments of the present invention, and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTSReferring to
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In each embodiment shown in FIGS. 2,4 and 5, the heater element 26 may be disposed in contact with the metal portion/strips/bands 140,240,340 for improved heat transfer.
While the invention has been described by reference to a specific embodiment, it should be understood that numerous changes may be made within the spirit and scope of the inventive concepts described. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the described embodiment, but will have full scope defined by the language of the following claims.
Claims
1. A reservoir tank module for a system for keeping a reservoir solution of urea in a liquid state at normally sub-freezing temperatures, comprising hybrid walls formed of metal and plastic polymer.
2. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 1 wherein said metal is formed as a pot-shaped portion and said plastic polymer is formed as a portion joined to said pot-shaped portion.
3. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 2 wherein said joining of said pot-shaped portion to said cylindrical portion includes respective mating barbed portions.
4. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 1 wherein said metal is formed as a plurality of strips and said plastic polymer is formed as a matrix encompassing said plurality of metal strips.
5. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 4 wherein at least two of said plurality of strips are interconnected.
6. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 1 wherein said metal is formed as a plurality of bands and said plastic polymer is formed as a matrix encompassing said plurality of metal bands.
7. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 6 wherein at least two of said plurality of bands are interconnected.
8. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 1 further comprising a heater.
9. A reservoir tank module in accordance with claim 8 wherein said heater in contact with said hybrid walls formed of metal.
10. A system for keeping a reservoir solution of urea in a liquid state at normally sub-freezing temperatures, comprising:
- a) a storage tank for said urea solution;
- b) a reservoir tank module in hydraulic communication with said storage tank for dispensing said urea solution, wherein said reservoir tank module includes hybrid walls formed of metal and plastic polymer.
11. A system in accordance with claim 10 wherein said reservoir tank module is disposed within said storage tank.
12. A system in accordance with claim 10 wherein said hybrid walls comprise metal formed as a pot-shaped portion and plastic polymer formed as a portion joined to said pot-shaped portion.
13. A system in accordance with claim 10 wherein said hybrid walls comprise metal formed as a plurality of strips and plastic polymer formed as a matrix encompassing said plurality of metal strips.
14. A system in accordance with claim 10 wherein said hybrid walls comprise metal formed as a plurality of bands and plastic polymer formed as a matrix encompassing said plurality of metal bands.
15. An internal combustion engine comprising a system for keeping a reservoir solution of urea in a liquid state at normally sub-freezing temperatures, wherein said system includes a reservoir tank module having hybrid walls formed of metal and plastic polymer.
16. An engine in accordance with claim 15 wherein said engine is compression-ignited.
17. An engine in accordance with claim 15 wherein said engine is lean burn spark ignited.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 11, 2009
Publication Date: May 12, 2011
Inventors: Michael J. Seino (Flushing, MI), Bob X. Li (Flint, MI), Daniel B. Hamilton (Grand Blanc, MI)
Application Number: 12/616,321
International Classification: F01N 13/14 (20100101); B65D 81/38 (20060101);