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Lecture 5 - Air Pollution Control - Web

The document discusses various techniques for controlling air pollution from motor vehicles and stationary sources. It describes controls for vehicle emissions like fuel to air ratios, catalytic converters and controls for stationary sources like particulate controls using cyclones, baghouses and wet scrubbers as well as gas controls like incineration.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views62 pages

Lecture 5 - Air Pollution Control - Web

The document discusses various techniques for controlling air pollution from motor vehicles and stationary sources. It describes controls for vehicle emissions like fuel to air ratios, catalytic converters and controls for stationary sources like particulate controls using cyclones, baghouses and wet scrubbers as well as gas controls like incineration.

Uploaded by

Chris
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Lecture Five

Air Pollution Control


Learning
Objectives
for Today
Educational Objectives
 Control of Motor Vehicle emissions
Fuel:Air ratio
Motor vehicle emissions
Control techniques
 Control of Stationary Sources
Control techniques
Control efficiency or Penetration rate
Motor vehicle engines
 Otto-cycle spark ignition(SI) internal
combustion engine(ICE)
 Used in light-duty cars and trucks,
motorcycles, boats, etc.
 Diesel cycle compression ignition (CI)
internal combustion engine
 Used in trucks and utility vehicles, light-duty
vehicles in Europe
Otto cycle spark ignition engines
 Characteristics
 Four- stroke
 Light-duty cars and trucks

 Two-stroke
 Motorcycles and other small engine
vehicles/equipment
Four-stroke engines
Emissions
 Spark ignition four- stroke internal
combustion engines
 Exhaust gases
 “blow by” gases
 Evaporative losses
Exhaust emissions
 Account for 90 to 92 % of total motor
vehicle emissions
 Include unburned/partially burned HCs
 Carbon monoxide
 Nitrogen oxides
Evaporative emissions
 Diurnal emissions-fuel tank cools at
night and heats up during the day
 Hot soak-evaporation of residual fuel
on shutting the engine off
 Operating losses-when engine is
running
 Refueling losses
Blow-by gases
 Unburned HCs move past piston rings and
accumulate in the crankcase

Crankcase
Combustion chemistry
 CO is produced from incomplete
combustion
 HCs are produced when the flame front

approaches relatively cool walls of the


cylinder.
 NOx is produced from N2 + O2 2 NO
Air: fuel relationships
Air : fuel ratios
 As A:F ratio increases to ~15
 Carbon monoxide decreases dramatically
 Hydrocarbon emissions decrease
 Nitrogen oxides emissions increase
dramatically
Hydrocarbon emissions
 Affected by
 A:F ratios
 “quenching”- walls effects – walls are
colder and combustion doesn’t precede
 Crevice zones (crack)
Crevice zones
 Confined spaces where combustion is
limited
 Located
 Near upper ring between piston and wall
 Behind rings
 Between upper rings
 Within sparkplug screw threads
 Small gaps around valves and seats
Nitrogen oxides emissions
 Depends on combustion chamber temperature
 Peak emissions occur under stoichiometric
conditions
 Affected by
 A:F ratio
 Sparking time
 Compression ratio
 Engine speed
Solving the motor vehicle pollution problem
requires a comprehensive approach
Emission control
techniques/systems
 Engine operation and design factors
 Engine-based control systems
 Exhaust emission systems
Engine operation/design
 Lean burn combustion
 Electronic ignition
Lean burn is an internal combustion of lean air-
fuel mixtures. It happens at very high
air-fuel ratios (up to 65:1), so the mixture has
considerably less amount of fuel in comparison
to stoichiometric combustion ratio (14.6:1 for
petrol).
Lean burn combustion
 Lean A:F ratios, from 15: 1 to 16:1
 Increase combustion efficiency
 Significantly decrease CO
 Reduce engine performance and
drivability
Spark timing
 Retarded from optimum to reduce
emissions
 Exhaust temperatures are hotter and allow
HCs and CO to be oxidized in the exhaust
system
 Decreases proportion of the air to fuel
mixture in quench zones
 Spark retardation decreases engine
performance
Compression ratios
 High compression ratios increase engine
power
 Decreased to reduce emissions of HCs
 Decrease in the ratio of
crevice/combustion zone volume
 Maintains exhaust gases at higher
temperatures
Compression ratios
 Lower compression ratios-decreased
efficiency and power, increased fuel
consumption
Engine-based control systems
 Crankcase ventilation
 Evaporative controls
 Exhaust gas recirculation
Crankcase ventilation
 Used to control “blow by” gases
 Crankcase purged with air
 Crankcase gases returned to combustion
chamber
Crankcase ventilation
Evaporative emissions
 Collect HCs on activated carbon
 Collected HCs are desorbed and burned
 Control systems are less efficient on high
volatility/low molecular weight fuels
Evaporative emissions control
Exhaust gas recirculation
 Exhaust gases used to absorb heat and
decrease combustion chamber
temperatures
 Reduces NOx production
 Effectiveness depends on the amount of
exhaust gas used
 10 % exhaust gases -reduces NOx by 30 to
50 %
Exhaust gas recirculation
Exhaust Gas Control Systems
 Thermal Reactors
 Oxidizing catalytic systems
 Reducing catalytic systems
 Three-way catalytic systems
Catalytic converters
Three-way catalytic systems
 Oxidation and reduction in a single unit
 All pollutants controlled in one bed
 At 0.995-1.008 φ values conversion
efficiencies of greater than 80 % for all
three pollutants
Compression ignition engines
(Euro)
 Air inducted, intake air compressed by
exhaust-driven turbine, or intake air
compressed by mechanical pump
 Increase engine power by increasing air
and fuel flow
 Four-stroke or two-stroke cycles
Compression ignition engines
 Fuel injected under high pressure into
combustion chamber
 Mixes with air and because of high
compression ratios (12-24:1) spontaneously
ignites
 Additional fuel mixes with air and is
combusted
Compression ignition engines
 Hydrocarbons and CO emissions are low
because combustion is complete
 Nitrogen oxide emissions are high
because of high temperatures
 Elemental carbon produced in fuel-rich
regions
Compression ignition engines
 Emissions control
 Focus on NOx and soot
 Nitrogen oxides - control of inlet
temperature and injection retardation
 50-65 % reduction
Alternative fuels
 Alcohol/alcohol blends
 Liquefied natural gas (LNG)
 Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG)
Control of diesel vehicle
pollution in Hong Kong
 Euro III standard for vehicles of 1995
and onwards
 Existing ones
 Taxies: LPG
 Light buses: 80% switched to LPG or
electricity
 Heavy duty: traps and/or catalytic
converters
Control of Emissions from
Stationary Sources
A Typical Air Pollution Control
System
Control efficiency, penetration
Q0 c0  Q1c1 Qc
Control efficiency     1 1 1
Q0 c0 Q0 c0

Q1c1
Penetration  p  1  efficiency 
Q0 c0

Q0, c0 Q1, c1

Control device

If we have more than one control device in series,


ηoverall = 1-(1-η1)(1-η2)(1-η3)(1-η4)
Poverall = p1p2p3p4
Generalized fractional
collection efficiency curve
Fractional collection
efficiencies of dust collectors
Particle collection systems
 Cyclones
 Filtration/baghouses
 Electrostatic precipitation
 Scrubbers
Simple cyclones used on grain
elevators in Galveston, Tx
Principle of filtration
 The basic principle of baghouse operation
involves the removal of dust from dust-laden gas
by passing the dirty gas through a filtration
medium.
 The cleaned gas emerges from one side of the
medium, while the dust is collected on the other
side. Periodically the collected dust is removed
from the fabric.
 A fabric filter “baghouse” system includes the
bag cleaning system, dust collection hoppers,
and dust removal system.
Basic theory
An ESP controls particle emissions by
(1) Charging the particles; (2) applying an
electric field to move the particles out of
the gas steam; (3) removing the collected
dust.
Electrostatic precipitators
Wet Scrubbers
– In wet scrubbing processes, liquid or
solid particles are removed from a gas
stream by transferring them to a liquid.
– Most wet scrubbing systems operate
with particulate collection efficiencies
over 95 percent.
– Wet scrubbing can effectively remove
fine particles in the range from 0.1 μm
to 20 μm.
Wet scrubbers
 Several types
 Open-spray tower
 Venturi scrubber
 Fiber bed scrubber
 Packed bed scrubber
Venturi scrubber used in the
steel industry
Venturi scrubber-schematic
Control of gas-phase emissions
 Incineration (Thermal oxidation)
 Adsorption
 Absorption
 Condensation
 Biological treatment
Factors affect combustion
 (1) Oxygen
 (2) Temperature
 (3) Time
 (4) Turbulence
Adsorption system
Application: Control of SOx
 Coal beneficiation – remove S prior to
combustion process.
 Fluidized bed combustion (FBC) –
remove S during the combustion process.
 Flue gas desulfurization(FGD) – remove
S after combustion and before emitted to
the atmosphere.
Flue-gas desulfurization(FGD)
 Use to scrub SO2 by coal-burning
utilities
 Use limestone/lime scrubbers
 Achieve 90+% collection efficiency
FGD
 Limestone scrubbing
Lime scrubbing
Control of NOx
 Low NOx burner
 Control mixing of fuel and air
 Staged combustion
 Fuel- rich followed by fuel-lean (fuel is
combusted in a primary zone that is fuel-rich,
followed by secondary and following zones that
are fuel-lean).
 Reduce O2 or excess O2 to cool
 Catalytic reduction
Control of NOx
Catalytic reduction –
titanium/vanadium

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