ACOUSTIC VOLUME IN HOT-END OF EXHAUST SYSTEMS
A vehicle exhaust system includes a component housing defining an internal cavity, a first exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity, a second exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity and axially spaced from the first exhaust gas treatment element by a gap, and a resonator volume in communication with the internal cavity.
An exhaust system conducts hot exhaust gases generated by an engine through various exhaust components to reduce emissions, improve fuel economy, and control noise. Short exhaust systems, such as those encountered with hybrid vehicles or rear engine vehicles for example, often have insufficient volume and/or length to achieve a desired tailpipe noise level in combination with acceptable back pressure levels. Further, as gasoline particulate filter (GPF) technology emerges into the market, corresponding increases in exhaust system back pressure will need to be offset in order to avoid adverse effects on fuel economy or performance.
In addition to addressing issues raised by the introduction of GPF technology, other emerging powertrain technologies are requiring the industry to provide even more stringent noise reduction. The frequencies that need to be attenuated are being pushed to lower and lower frequencies not previously having to have been addressed. One traditional solution to attenuate such frequencies is to provide more internal volume; however, due to tight packaging constraints, the area required for such volume is not available. Another solution to attenuate these lower frequencies is to use valves; however, valves drive a higher back pressure at lower revolutions-per-minute, which is not desirable. As such, there is a need for unique acoustic solutions that are more efficient from a volume perspective and have less impact from a back pressure aspect.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn one exemplary embodiment, a vehicle exhaust system includes a component housing defining an internal cavity, a first exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity, a second exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity and axially spaced from the first exhaust gas treatment element by a gap, and a resonator volume in communication with the internal cavity.
In a further embodiment of the above, the resonator volume is formed between an outer surface of the component housing and an inner surface of a resonator housing that at least partially surrounds the component housing, and the system further includes at least one resonator connection in communication with the resonator volume, wherein the resonator connection is located at the gap.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the resonator volume is formed between an outer surface of the component housing and an inner surface of a resonator housing that at least partially surrounds the component housing, and the system further includes an inlet cone positioned at one end of the component housing and an outlet cone positioned at an opposite end of the component housing. The system also includes at least one resonator connection in communication with the resonator volume, and wherein the at least one resonator connection is located at one of the inlet and outlet cones.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the resonator volume is enclosed within a resonator housing and further including at least one connection of the resonator housing to the component housing.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the resonator housing is located externally of the component housing.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the at least one resonator comprises a plurality of resonator connections in communication with a resonator volume.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the resonator volume is in parallel with the first and second gas treatment elements.
In another exemplary embodiment, a vehicle exhaust system includes a first housing defining an internal cavity, at least one exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity, a resonator volume spaced radially outwardly of the at least one exhaust gas treatment element, and a resonator connection to provide communication between the resonator volume and the internal cavity.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, a second housing defines the resonator volume, and wherein the resonator connection is either located internally within the second housing or externally of the second housing.
In another exemplary embodiment, a vehicle exhaust system includes a component housing defining an internal cavity, an inlet coupled to an upstream end of the component housing, an outlet coupled to a downstream end of the component housing, a first exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity, and a second exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity and separated from the first exhaust gas treatment element by a gap. The system further includes a resonator volume in communication with the internal cavity and a plurality of resonator connections in communication with the resonator volume.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the second exhaust gas treatment element is axially spaced from the first exhaust gas treatment element by the gap such that the first and second exhaust gas treatment elements are coaxial, and wherein the plurality of resonator connections comprises at least a first resonator connection located at the gap and a second resonator connection located at the inlet or outlet.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the resonator volume is external to the component housing.
In a further embodiment of any of the above, the second exhaust gas treatment element is in parallel with the first exhaust gas treatment element such that the first and second exhaust gas treatment elements are non-coaxial, and wherein the plurality of resonator connections comprises at least a first resonator connection located at the gap and a second resonator connection located at the inlet or outlet.
These and other features of this application will be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
Exhaust components at the hot end 14 can include, for example, exhaust gas treatment elements such as a diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC), a diesel particulate filter (DPF), a gasoline particulate filter (GPF), and a selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalyst that are used to remove contaminants from the exhaust gas as known. Exhaust gases pass through these components and enter the cold end 16 where the exhaust gas exits the system 10 via a tailpipe. The described exhaust components can be mounted in various different configurations and combinations dependent upon vehicle application and available packaging space.
As discussed above,
Fn=(nc)/(4L) where:
fn=resonant frequency of standing wave n (Hz)
n=ordinal number of standing wave
c=speed of sound (m/s)
L=length of closed-open pipe (m)
The chart of
It has been shown through testing and simulations that a Helmholtz Resonator, such as an acoustic volume of the order of 2 to 4 L in communication with the exhaust flow via a neck pipe for example, that is positioned in the hot end 14 between a turbo outlet and a converter, or between converter after-treatment elements, provides an acoustic benefit about twice that of a similar amount of volume applied in the cold end 16 (downstream of the after-treatment) with no impact on back pressure. From a tailpipe noise perspective, positioning the Helmholtz resonator as close as possible to the engine 12 provides the best acoustic performance
The subject invention proposes packaging one or more Helmholtz Resonators at one of three locations in the hot end 14 of the system 10. For example, the resonator(s) could be located after the manifold or turbo outlet but before the converters, between the converters; and/or after the converters. Various example configurations are discussed below and shown in the accompanying figures.
An inlet cone 44 directs flow into the first exhaust gas treatment element 36. The inlet cone 44 receives hot engine exhaust gases from an inlet pipe 46. An outlet cone 48 directs treated exhaust gas flow exiting the second exhaust gas treatment element 38 into an outlet pipe 50. In this example, the component housing 32 defines a center axis A and the inlet cone 44, first exhaust gas treatment element 36, second exhaust gas treatment element 38, and outlet cone 48 are coaxial with the center axis A.
At least one resonator connection 52 is in communication with the resonator volume 42 within the resonator housing 43. The component housing 32 comprises a center housing portion 54 that encloses the first 36 and second 38 gas treatment elements, an inlet portion 56 that is positioned at one end of the center housing portion 54 to surround the inlet cone 44, and an outlet portion 58 that is positioned at an opposite end of the center housing portion 54 to surround the outlet cone 48. At least one resonator connection 52 is in communication with the resonator volume 42. In the example shown in
In each of these different configurations, the configuration is sealed such that there is no net flow in the Helmholtz resonator. Hot engine exhaust gas flows in through the inlet pipe 46, expands and slows down as the gas travels through inlet cone 44, passes through the first exhaust gas treatment element 36, and then expands into the gap 40 between the first 36 and second 48 exhaust gas treatment elements. The Helmholtz resonator connection 52 and resonator volume 42 are in parallel with the flow connected at the gap 40. The exhaust gas then contracts and passes through the second exhaust gas treatment element 38 and then expands into the outlet cone 48 before contracting and exiting through the outlet pipe 50.
The exhaust gas pressure pulsations from the engine travel down through the exhaust system 10 and are modified as they travel through the mechanisms of restriction, reflection, and absorption. When the pulsations reach the gap 40 they cause the exhaust gas in the resonator neck/connection 52 to start moving. For low frequencies this gas can be considered as a lumped mass. The lumped mass of gas in the resonator neck 52 compresses or rarifies the exhaust gas in the surrounding resonator volume 42. As the lumped mass of gas compresses the resonator volume 42, the volume pressure increases. As the lumped mass of gas rarifies, the volume pressure decreases. The result of this pressure is to push the lumped mass in the opposite direction to which it is travelling. In this way, the resonator volume 42 is acting as a spring and provides a spring-mass system with a tuned frequency. As there is no net flow through the Helmholtz resonator, and as the resonator neck 52 comprises a side-branch arrangement, the impact on back pressure is negligible.
In the example shown in
In the example shown in
In another example shown in
Possible locations for the resonator connections 86 are at the inlet resonator volume 90, at the outlet resonator volume 94, and at the resonator volume at the gap 82. The resonator connection 86 associated at the gap 82 can be at a location between the elements 36, 38, at an exit from the first exhaust gas treatment element 36, and/or at an entrance to the second exhaust gas treatment element 38. The resonator connections 86 can be used in any number, and in any combination, as needed to provide the desired acoustic effect.
The subject invention combines a tuning element with the primary function of acoustic attenuation with a component in the hot end 14 of the exhaust system 10 at a location that is much closer to the pressure anti-node at the engine exhaust outlet than traditional configurations. This provides improved acoustic efficiency with negligible back pressure impact resulting in tailpipe noise/acoustic volume improvement.
Although an embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
Claims
1. A vehicle exhaust system comprising:
- a component housing defining an internal cavity;
- a first exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity;
- a second exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity and axially spaced from the first exhaust gas treatment element by a gap; and
- a resonator volume in communication with the internal cavity.
2. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein the resonator volume is formed between an outer surface of the component housing and an inner surface of a resonator housing that at least partially surrounds the component housing, and including at least one resonator connection in communication with the resonator volume, wherein the resonator connection is located at the gap.
3. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein the resonator volume is formed between an outer surface of the component housing and an inner surface of a resonator housing that at least partially surrounds the component housing, and including an inlet cone positioned at one end of the component housing and an outlet cone positioned at an opposite end of the component housing, and including at least one resonator connection in communication with the resonator volume, and wherein the at least one resonator connection is located at one of the inlet and outlet cones.
4. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 3 wherein the at least one resonator connection comprises at least a first resonator connection located at the gap and a second resonator connection located at one of the inlet and outlet cones.
5. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein there is no net flow out of the resonator volume.
6. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein the resonator volume is formed between an outer surface of the component housing and an inner surface of a resonator housing that at least partially surrounds the component housing, and wherein the resonator volume is concentric with the center axis such that the resonator volume completely and entirely surrounds an outer circumference of the first and second gas treatment elements.
7. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein the resonator volume is formed between an outer surface of the component housing and an inner surface of a resonator housing that at least partially surrounds the component housing, and wherein the resonator volume is offset relative to the component housing such that the resonator volume only partially surrounds an outer circumference of the first and second gas treatment elements.
8. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein the resonator volume is enclosed within a resonator housing and including at least one connection of the resonator housing to the component housing.
9. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 8 wherein the component housing comprises a center housing portion that encloses the first and second gas treatment elements, an inlet portion positioned at one end of the center housing portion, and an outlet portion positioned at an opposite end of the center housing portion, and wherein the at least one connection comprises at least one pipe that is connected to at least one of the center housing, inlet, and outlet portions.
10. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 10 wherein the resonator housing is located externally of the component housing.
11. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein the resonator volume is enclosed within a resonator housing and including at least one pipe that connects the resonator housing to at least one of the component housing, an inlet pipe to the component housing, and an outlet pipe from the component housing.
12. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 including a plurality of resonator connections in communication with the resonator volume.
13. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 1 wherein the resonator volume is in parallel with the first and second gas treatment elements.
14. A vehicle exhaust system comprising:
- a first housing defining an internal cavity;
- at least one exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity;
- a resonator volume spaced radially outwardly of the at least one exhaust gas treatment element; and
- a resonator connection to provide communication between the resonator volume and the internal cavity.
15. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 14 including a second housing that defines the resonator volume, wherein the resonator connection is either located internally within the second housing or externally of the second housing.
16. A vehicle exhaust system comprising:
- a component housing defining an internal cavity;
- an inlet coupled to an upstream end of the component housing;
- an outlet coupled to a downstream end of the component housing;
- a first exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity;
- a second exhaust gas treatment element positioned within the internal cavity and separated from the first exhaust gas treatment element by a gap;
- a resonator volume in communication with the internal cavity; and
- a plurality of resonator connections in communication with the resonator volume.
17. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 16 wherein the second exhaust gas treatment element is axially spaced from the first exhaust gas treatment element by the gap such that the first and second exhaust gas treatment elements are coaxial, and wherein the plurality of resonator connections comprises at least a first resonator connection located at the gap and a second resonator connection located at the inlet or outlet.
18. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 17 wherein the resonator volume is external to the component housing.
19. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 16 including a resonator housing that defines the resonator volume wherein the resonator housing at least partially surrounds the component housing.
20. The vehicle exhaust system according to claim 16 wherein the second exhaust gas treatment element is in parallel with the first exhaust gas treatment element such that the first and second exhaust gas treatment elements are non-coaxial, and wherein the plurality of resonator connections comprises at least a first resonator connection located at the gap and a second resonator connection located at the inlet or outlet.
Type: Application
Filed: Sep 25, 2017
Publication Date: Jun 4, 2020
Inventors: Jean Lagier (Arcey), James Egan (Indianapolis, IN), Djafar Larbi (Muenchen), Marion Gonzalez (Montbeliard), Frederic Blanco-Sotelo (Boulot)
Application Number: 16/629,073