Page 63 - Automotive Engineering Powertrain Chassis System and Vehicle Body
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CH AP TER 3 .1       Emissions control

               into which the extra air is pumped, to join the gas stream  is required. The warm air is taken from a jacket around the
               before it enters the Pt, or Pt-P1, stage.          exhaust manifold.
                 With three-way conversion, a closed-loop control   Ford have developed a similar system. In this case,
               system is essential, for regulating the supply of fuel ac-  however, the thermostat senses under-bonnet tempera-
               curately in relation to the mass air-flow into the engine.  ture,andprovisionismade, bymeans ofavacuum-actuated
               This entails installing an oxygen sensor in the exhaust,  override, to enable maximum power output to be obtained
               and an on-board microprocessor to exercise control, both  during warm-up.
               to correct continuously for divergencies from the stoi-  The Austin-Rover design is outstanding for its sim-
               chiometric ratio and to ensure good driveability.  plicity. It is a banjo-shaped pressed steel box assembly,
                                                                  the handle of which is represented by the air intake duct
                                                                  to the air cleaner. In both the upper and lower faces of
               3.1.10 The electronic control                      the box is a large diameter port, and a flap valve is poised
               system                                             between them. This flap valve is mounted on a bimetal
                                                                  strip which, when hot, deflects to close one port and,
               In practice, the electronic control system has to be more  when cold, to close the other. The latter port simply
               complex than might be assumed from the preceding   lets air at the ambient temperature into the intake, while
               paragraph. When the engine is being cranked for starting  the former is connected by a duct to a metal shroud
               it has to switch automatically from a closed- to an open-  over the exhaust manifold and therefore passes hot air
               loop system, to provide a rich mixture. In this condition  into the intake. It follows that the temperature of the
               the air supply for the second converter bed is diverted to  incoming mixture from both ports is regulated by its
               the exhaust manifold to oxidise the inevitable HC and  effect on the bimetal strip, which deflects the flap valve
               CO content, thus avoiding a rapid rise in temperature in,  towards the hot or cold port, as necessary.
               and overloading of, the second stage of the converter.
               Owing to the low temperatures in the combustion
               chambers of the engine, NO x production is minimal or  3.1.12 Evaporative emissions
               even zero, so no conversion is required in the first stage.
                 During warm-up the mixture strength has to be mod-  The evaporative emissions are mostly hydrocarbons
               ified for the transition from rich to stoichiometric mix-  though, with some special fuels and those that have been
               ture. However, to cater to heavy loading, such as  modified to increase octane number, alcohols may also be
               acceleration uphill, it may again have to be enriched,  present. In general, the vapour comes from four sources:
               perhaps with EGR in this condition to inhibit the forma-
               tion of NO x . The on-board microprocessor capabilities,  (1) Fuel tank venting system.
               therefore, must include control over idle speed, spark  (2) Permeation through the walls of plastics tanks.
               timing, EGR, purge of hydrocarbons from carbon canister  (3) The carburettor venting system.
               vapour-traps, early evaporation of fuel by air intake
               heating, torque converter lock-up, and a fault-diagnosis  (4) Through the crankcase breather.
               system.                                            Fumes from the fuel tank venting system are absorbed in
                                                                  carbon canisters which are periodically purged (Section
                                                                  3.1.17). Permeation through the walls of plastics tanks is
               3.1.11 Warm-air intake systems
                                                                  controlled by one of four methods. These are:
                                                                  (1) Fluorine treatment.
               Apart from setting the coolant thermostat to open at
               higher temperatures to improve combustion in cold  (2) Sulphur trioxide treatment.
               conditions, several manufacturers have introduced au-  (3) Du Pont one-shot injection moulding (a laminar
               tomatic control of the temperature of the air drawn into  barrier treatment).
               the carburettor. The GM system is built into a conven-
                                                                  (4) Premier Fuel Systems method of lamination.
               tional air cleaner. There are two air valves, operated by
               vacuum-actuated diaphragm mechanisms, and controlled  Plastics tanks are generally moulded by extrusion of what
               by a thermostat. One valve lets warm and the other cold  is termed a parison (a large-diameter tube), which is
               air into the intake.                               suspended in a female mould into which it is then blow-
                 The thermostat, mounted on the air cleaner, senses the  moulded radially outwards. The chemical treatments are

               temperature inside, maintaining it at 40–45 C. This  applied internally, either in the parison or in the blow-
               thermostat operates a two-way control valve directing  moulding. With either procedure, problems arise owing
               either induction system depression or atmospheric pres-  to the toxicity of the barrier chemicals and in the disposal
               sure to the actuator, according to whether cool or warm air  of the chemical waste.


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