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Wikipedia

Catalytic converter

A catalytic converter is an exhaust emission control device that converts toxic gases and pollutants in exhaust gas from an internal combustion engine into less-toxic pollutants by catalyzing a redox reaction. Catalytic converters are usually used with internal combustion engines fueled by gasoline or diesel, including lean-burn engines, and sometimes on kerosene heaters and stoves.

A three-way catalytic converter on a gasoline-powered 1996 Dodge Ram
Simulation of flow inside a catalytic converter

The first widespread introduction of catalytic converters was in the United States automobile market. To comply with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's stricter regulation of exhaust emissions, most gasoline-powered vehicles starting with the 1975 model year are equipped with catalytic converters.[1][2][3] These "two-way" converters combine oxygen with carbon monoxide (CO) and unburned hydrocarbons (HC) to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O). Although two-way converters on gasoline engines were rendered obsolete in 1981 by "three-way" converters that also reduce oxides of nitrogen (NOx);[4] they are still used on lean-burn engines to oxidize particulate matter and hydrocarbon emissions (including Diesel engines, which typically use lean combustion), as three-way-converters require fuel-rich or stoichiometric combustion to successfully reduce NOx.

Although catalytic converters are most commonly applied to exhaust systems in automobiles, they are also used on electrical generators, forklifts, mining equipment, trucks, buses, locomotives, motorcycles, and on ships. They are even used on some wood stoves to control emissions.[5] This is usually in response to government regulation, either through environmental regulation or through health and safety regulations.

History

Catalytic converter prototypes were first designed in France at the end of the 19th century, when only a few thousand "oil cars" were on the roads; these prototypes had inert clay-based materials coated with platinum, rhodium, and palladium and sealed into a double metallic cylinder.[6] A few decades later, a catalytic converter was patented by Eugene Houdry, a French mechanical engineer. Houdry was an expert in catalytic oil refining, having invented the catalytic cracking process that all modern refining is based on today.[7] Houdry moved to the United States in 1930 to live near the refineries in the Philadelphia area and develop his catalytic refining process. When the results of early studies of smog in Los Angeles were published, Houdry became concerned about the role of smokestack exhaust and automobile exhaust in air pollution and founded a company called Oxy-Catalyst. Houdry first developed catalytic converters for smokestacks, called "cats" for short, and later developed catalytic converters for warehouse forklifts that used low grade, unleaded gasoline.[8] In the mid-1950s, he began research to develop catalytic converters for gasoline engines used on cars and was awarded United States Patent 2,742,437 for his work.[9]

Catalytic converters were further developed by a series of engineers including Carl D. Keith, John J. Mooney, Antonio Eleazar, and Phillip Messina at Engelhard Corporation,[10][11] creating the first production catalytic converter in 1973.[12][unreliable source?]

The first widespread introduction of catalytic converters was in the United States automobile market. To comply with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's new regulation of exhaust emissions, most gasoline-powered vehicles starting with the 1975 model year are equipped with catalytic converters. These "two-way" converters combined oxygen with carbon monoxide (CO) and unburned hydrocarbons (HC, chemical compounds in fuel of the form CmHn) to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O).[4][1][2][3] These stringent emission control regulations forced the removal of the antiknock agent tetraethyl lead from automotive gasoline, to reduce lead in the air. Lead is a catalyst poison and would effectively destroy a catalytic converter by coating the catalyst's surface. Requiring the removal of lead allowed the use of catalytic converters to meet the other emission standards in the regulations.[13]

William C. Pfefferle developed a catalytic combustor for gas turbines in the early 1970s, allowing combustion without significant formation of nitrogen oxides and carbon monoxide.[14][15]

Construction

 
Cutaway of a metal-core converter
 
Ceramic-core converter

The catalytic converter's construction is as follows:

  1. The catalyst support or substrate. For automotive catalytic converters, the core is usually a ceramic monolith that has a honeycomb structure (commonly square, not hexagonal). (Prior to the mid 1980s, the catalyst material was deposited on a packed bed of alumina pellets in early GM applications.) Metallic foil monoliths made of Kanthal (FeCrAl)[16] are used in applications where particularly high heat resistance is required.[16] The substrate is structured to produce a large surface area. The cordierite ceramic substrate used in most catalytic converters was invented by Rodney Bagley, Irwin Lachman, and Ronald Lewis at Corning Glass, for which they were inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2002.[4]
  2. The washcoat. A washcoat is a carrier for the catalytic materials and is used to disperse the materials over a large surface area. Aluminum oxide, titanium dioxide, silicon dioxide e.g. colloidal silica or a mixture of silica and alumina can be used. The catalytic materials are suspended in the washcoat prior to applying to the core. Washcoat materials are selected to form a rough, irregular surface, which increases the surface area compared to the smooth surface of the bare substrate.[17]
  3. Ceria or ceria-zirconia. These oxides are mainly added as oxygen storage promoters.[18]
  4. The catalyst itself is most often a mix of precious metals, mostly from the platinum group. Platinum is the most active catalyst and is widely used, but is not suitable for all applications because of unwanted additional reactions and historically high cost. Palladium and rhodium are two other precious metals used, though as of February 2023, platinum has become the least expensive of the platinum group metals. Rhodium is used as a reduction catalyst, palladium is used as an oxidation catalyst, and platinum is used both for reduction and oxidation. Cerium, iron, manganese, and nickel are also used, although each has limitations. Nickel is not legal for use in the European Union because of its reaction with carbon monoxide into toxic nickel tetracarbonyl.[citation needed] Copper can be used everywhere except Japan.[clarification needed]

Upon failure, a catalytic converter can be recycled into scrap. The precious metals inside the converter, including platinum, palladium, and rhodium, are extracted.

Placement of catalytic converters

Catalytic converters require a temperature of 400 °C (752 °F) to operate effectively. Therefore, they are placed as close to the engine as possible, or one or more smaller catalytic converters (known as "pre-cats") are placed immediately after the exhaust manifold.

Types

Two-way

A 2-way (or "oxidation", sometimes called an "oxi-cat") catalytic converter has two simultaneous tasks:

  1. Oxidation of carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide: 2 CO + O2 → 2 CO2
  2. Oxidation of hydrocarbons (unburnt and partially burned fuel) to carbon dioxide and water: CxH2x+2 + [(3x+1)/2] O2 → x CO2 + (x+1) H2O (a combustion reaction)

This type of catalytic converter is widely used on diesel engines to reduce hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions. They were also used on gasoline engines in American- and Canadian-market automobiles until 1981. Because of their inability to control oxides of nitrogen, they were superseded by three-way converters.

Three-way

Three-way catalytic converters have the additional advantage of controlling the emission of nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) (both together abbreviated with NOx and not to be confused with nitrous oxide (N2O)). NOx species are precursors to acid rain and smog.[19]

Since 1981, "three-way" (oxidation-reduction) catalytic converters have been used in vehicle emission control systems in the United States and Canada; many other countries have also adopted stringent vehicle emission regulations that in effect require three-way converters on gasoline-powered vehicles. The reduction and oxidation catalysts are typically contained in a common housing; however, in some instances, they may be housed separately. A three-way catalytic converter has three simultaneous tasks:[19]

Reduction of nitrogen oxides to nitrogen (N2)

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Oxidation of carbon, hydrocarbons, and carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide

  •  
  •  
  •  

These three reactions occur most efficiently when the catalytic converter receives exhaust from an engine running slightly above the stoichiometric point. For gasoline combustion, this ratio is between 14.6 and 14.8 parts air to one part fuel, by weight. The ratio for autogas (or liquefied petroleum gas LPG), natural gas, and ethanol fuels can vary significantly for each, notably so with oxygenated or alcohol based fuels, with e85 requiring approximately 34% more fuel, requiring modified fuel system tuning and components when using those fuels. In general, engines fitted with 3-way catalytic converters are equipped with a computerized closed-loop feedback fuel injection system using one or more oxygen sensors,[citation needed] though early in the deployment of three-way converters, carburetors equipped with feedback mixture control were used.

Three-way converters are effective when the engine is operated within a narrow band of air-fuel ratios near the stoichiometric point.[20] Total conversion efficiency falls very rapidly when the engine is operated outside of this band. Slightly lean of stoichiometric, the exhaust gases from the engine contain excess oxygen, the production of NOx by the engine increases, and the efficiency of the catalyst at reducing NOx falls off rapidly. However, the conversion of HC and CO is very efficient due to the available oxygen, oxidizing to H2O and CO2. Slightly rich of stoichiometric, the production of CO and unburnt HC by the engine starts to increase dramatically, available oxygen decreases, and the efficiency of the catalyst for oxidizing CO and HC decreases significantly, especially as stored oxygen becomes depleted. However, the efficiency of the catalyst at reducing NOx is good, and the production of NOx by the engine decreases. To maintain catalyst efficiency, the air:fuel ratio must stay close to stoichiometric and not remain rich or lean for too long.

Closed-loop engine control systems are used for effective operation of three-way catalytic converters because of this continuous rich-lean balance required for effective NOx reduction and HC+CO oxidation. The control system allows the catalyst to release oxygen during slightly rich operating conditions, which oxidizes CO and HC under conditions that also favor the reduction of NOx. Before the stored oxygen is depleted, the control system shifts the air:fuel ratio to become slightly lean, improving HC and CO oxidation while storing additional oxygen in the catalyst material, at a small penalty in NOx reduction efficiency. Then the air:fuel mixture is brought back to slightly rich, at a small penalty in CO and HC oxidation efficiency, and the cycle repeats. Efficiency is improved when this oscillation around the stoichiometric point is small and carefully controlled.[21]

Closed-loop control under light to moderate load is accomplished by using one or more oxygen sensors in the exhaust system. When oxygen is detected by the sensor, the air:fuel ratio is lean of stoichiometric, and when oxygen is not detected, it is rich. The control system adjusts the rate of fuel being injected into the engine based on this signal to keep the air:fuel ratio near the stoichiometric point in order to maximize the catalyst conversion efficiency. The control algorithm is also affected by the time delay between the adjustment of the fuel flow rate and the sensing of the changed air:fuel ratio by the sensor, as well as the sigmoidal response of the oxygen sensors. Typical control systems are designed to rapidly sweep the air:fuel ratio such that it oscillates slightly around the stoichiometric point, staying near the optimal efficiency point while managing the levels of stored oxygen and unburnt HC.[20]

Closed loop control is often not used during high load/maximum power operation, when an increase in emissions is permitted and a rich mixture is commanded to increase power and prevent exhaust gas temperature from exceeding design limits. This presents a challenge for control system and catalyst design. During such operations, large amounts of unburnt HC are produced by the engine, well beyond the capacity of the catalyst to release oxygen. The surface of the catalyst quickly becomes saturated with HC. When returning to lower power output and leaner air:fuel ratios, the control system must prevent excessive oxygen from reaching the catalyst too quickly, as this will rapidly burn the HC in the already hot catalyst, potentially exceeding the design temperature limit of the catalyst. Excessive catalyst temperature can prematurely age the catalyst, reducing its efficiency before reaching its design lifetime. Excessive catalyst temperature can also be caused by cylinder misfire, which continuously flows unburnt HC combined with oxygen to the hot catalyst, burning in the catalyst and increasing its temperature.[22]

Unwanted reactions

Unwanted reactions result in the formation of hydrogen sulfide and ammonia, which poison catalysts. Nickel or manganese is sometimes added to the washcoat to limit hydrogen-sulfide emissions.[citation needed] Sulfur-free or low-sulfur fuels eliminate or minimize problems with hydrogen sulfide.

Diesel engines

For compression-ignition (i.e., diesel) engines, the most commonly used catalytic converter is the diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC). DOCs contain palladium and/or platinum supported on alumina. This catalyst converts particulate matter (PM), hydrocarbons, and carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide and water. These converters often operate at 90 percent efficiency, virtually eliminating diesel odor and helping reduce visible particulates. These catalysts are ineffective for NOx, so NOx emissions from diesel engines are controlled by exhaust gas recirculation (EGR).

In 2010, most light-duty diesel manufacturers in the U.S. added catalytic systems to their vehicles to meet federal emissions requirements. Two techniques have been developed for the catalytic reduction of NOx emissions under lean exhaust conditions, selective catalytic reduction (SCR) and the NOx adsorber.

Instead of precious metal-containing NOx absorbers, most manufacturers selected base-metal SCR systems that use a reagent such as ammonia to reduce the NOx into nitrogen and water.[23] Ammonia is supplied to the catalyst system by the injection of urea into the exhaust, which then undergoes thermal decomposition and hydrolysis into ammonia. The urea solution is also referred to as diesel exhaust fluid (DEF).

Diesel exhaust contains relatively high levels of particulate matter. Catalytic converters remove only 20–40% of PM so particulates are cleaned up by a soot trap or diesel particulate filter (DPF). In the U.S., all on-road light, medium, and heavy-duty diesel-powered vehicles built after 1 January 2007, are subject to diesel particulate emission limits, and so are equipped with a 2-way catalytic converter and a diesel particulate filter.[citation needed] As long as the engine was manufactured before 1 January 2007, the vehicle is not required to have the DPF system.[citation needed] This led to an inventory runup by engine manufacturers in late 2006 so they could continue selling pre-DPF vehicles well into 2007.[24]

Lean-burn spark-ignition engines

For lean-burn spark-ignition engines, an oxidation catalyst is used in the same manner as in a diesel engine. Emissions from lean burn spark ignition engines are very similar to emissions from a diesel compression ignition engine.

Installation

Many vehicles have a close-coupled catalytic converter located near the engine's exhaust manifold. The converter heats up quickly, due to its exposure to the very hot exhaust gases, enabling it to reduce undesirable emissions during the engine warm-up period. This is achieved by burning off the excess hydrocarbons which result from the extra-rich mixture required for a cold start.

When catalytic converters were first introduced, most vehicles used carburetors that provided a relatively rich air-fuel ratio. Oxygen (O2) levels in the exhaust stream were therefore generally insufficient for the catalytic reaction to occur efficiently. Most designs of the time therefore included secondary air injection, which injected air into the exhaust stream. This increased the available oxygen, allowing the catalyst to function as intended.

Some three-way catalytic converter systems have air injection systems with the air injected between the first (NOx reduction) and second (HC and CO oxidation) stages of the converter. As in two-way converters, this injected air provides oxygen for the oxidation reactions. An upstream air injection point, ahead of the catalytic converter, is also sometimes present to provide additional oxygen only during the engine warm up period. This causes unburned fuel to ignite in the exhaust tract, thereby preventing it reaching the catalytic converter at all. This technique reduces the engine runtime needed for the catalytic converter to reach its "light-off" or operating temperature.

Most newer vehicles have electronic fuel injection systems, and do not require air injection systems in their exhausts. Instead, they provide a precisely controlled air-fuel mixture that quickly and continually cycles between lean and rich combustion. Oxygen sensors monitor the exhaust oxygen content before and after the catalytic converter, and the engine control unit uses this information to adjust the fuel injection so as to prevent the first (NOx reduction) catalyst from becoming oxygen-loaded, while simultaneously ensuring the second (HC and CO oxidation) catalyst is sufficiently oxygen-saturated.

Damage

Catalyst poisoning occurs when the catalytic converter is exposed to exhaust containing substances that coat the working surfaces, so that they cannot contact and react with the exhaust. The most notable contaminant is lead, so vehicles equipped with catalytic converters can run only on unleaded fuel. Other common catalyst poisons include sulfur, manganese (originating primarily from the gasoline additive MMT), and silicon, which can enter the exhaust stream if the engine has a leak that allows coolant into the combustion chamber. Phosphorus is another catalyst contaminant. Although phosphorus is no longer used in gasoline, it (and zinc, another low-level catalyst contaminant) was widely used in engine oil antiwear additives such as zinc dithiophosphate (ZDDP). Beginning in 2004, a limit of phosphorus concentration in engine oils was adopted in the API SM and ILSAC GF-4 specifications.

Depending on the contaminant, catalyst poisoning can sometimes be reversed by running the engine under a very heavy load for an extended period of time.[citation needed] The increased exhaust temperature can sometimes vaporize or sublimate the contaminant, removing it from the catalytic surface.[citation needed] However, removal of lead deposits in this manner is usually not possible because of lead's high boiling point.[25]

Any condition that causes abnormally high levels of unburned hydrocarbons (raw or partially burnt fuel or oils) to reach the converter will tend to significantly elevate its temperature, bringing the risk of a meltdown of the substrate and resultant catalytic deactivation and severe exhaust restriction. These conditions include failure of the upstream components of the exhaust system (manifold/header assembly and associated clamps susceptible to rust/corrosion and/or fatigue e.g. the exhaust manifold splintering after repeated heat cycling), ignition system e.g. coil packs and/or primary ignition components (e.g. distributor cap, wires, ignition coil and spark plugs) and/or damaged fuel system components (fuel injectors, fuel pressure regulator, and associated sensors). Oil and/or coolant leaks, perhaps caused by a head gasket leak, can also cause high unburned hydrocarbons.

Regulations

Emissions regulations vary considerably from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Most automobile spark-ignition engines in North America have been fitted with catalytic converters since 1975,[4][1][2][3] and the technology used in non-automotive applications is generally based on automotive technology. In many jurisdictions, it is illegal to remove or disable a catalytic converter for any reason other than its direct and immediate replacement. Nevertheless, some vehicle owners remove or "gut" the catalytic converter on their vehicle.[26][27] In such cases, the converter may be replaced by a welded-in section of ordinary pipe or a flanged "test pipe", ostensibly meant to check if the converter is clogged by comparing how the engine runs with and without the converter. This facilitates temporary reinstallation of the converter in order to pass an emission test.[28]

In the United States, it is a violation of Section 203(a)(3)(A) of the 1990 amended Clean Air Act for a vehicle repair shop to remove a converter from a vehicle, or cause a converter to be removed from a vehicle, except in order to replace it with another converter,[29] and Section 203(a)(3)(B) makes it illegal for any person to sell or to install any part that would bypass, defeat, or render inoperative any emission control system, device, or design element. Vehicles without functioning catalytic converters generally fail emission inspections. The automotive aftermarket supplies high-flow converters for vehicles with upgraded engines, or whose owners prefer an exhaust system with larger-than-stock capacity.[30]

Catalytic converters have been mandatory on all new gasoline cars sold in the European Union and the United Kingdom since January 1, 1993 in order to comply with the Euro 1 emission standards.[31]

Effect on exhaust flow

Faulty catalytic converters as well as undamaged early types of converters can restrict the flow of exhaust, which negatively affects vehicle performance and fuel economy.[26] Modern catalytic converters do not significantly restrict exhaust flow. A 2006 test on a 1999 Honda Civic, for example, showed that removing the stock catalytic converter netted only a 3% increase in maximum horsepower; a new metallic core converter only cost the car 1% horsepower, compared to no converter.[28]

Dangers

Carburetors on pre-1981 vehicles without feedback fuel-air mixture control could easily provide too much fuel to the engine, which could cause the catalytic converter to overheat and potentially ignite flammable materials under the car.[32]

Warm-up period

Vehicles fitted with catalytic converters emit most of their total pollution during the first five minutes of engine operation; for example, before the catalytic converter has warmed up sufficiently to be fully effective.[33]

In the early 2000s it became common to place the catalyst converter right next to the exhaust manifold, close to the engine, for much quicker warm-up. In 1995, Alpina introduced an electrically heated catalyst. Called "E-KAT," it was used in Alpina's B12 5,7 E-KAT based on the BMW 750i.[34] Heating coils inside the catalytic converter assemblies are electrified just after the engine is started, bringing the catalyst up to operating temperature very quickly to qualify the vehicle for low emission vehicle (LEV) designation.[35] BMW later introduced the same heated catalyst, developed jointly by Emitec, Alpina, and BMW,[34] in its 750i in 1999.[35]

Some vehicles contain a pre-cat, a small catalytic converter upstream of the main catalytic converter which heats up faster on vehicle start up, reducing the emissions associated with cold starts. A pre-cat is most commonly used by an auto manufacturer when trying to attain the Ultra Low Emissions Vehicle (ULEV) rating, such as on the Toyota MR2 Roadster.[36]

Environmental effect

Catalytic converters have proven to be reliable and effective in reducing noxious tailpipe emissions. However, they also have some shortcomings in use, and also adverse environmental effects in production:

  • An engine equipped with a three-way catalyst must run at the stoichiometric point, which means more fuel is consumed than in a lean-burn engine. This means approximately 10% more CO2 emissions from the vehicle.[citation needed]
  • Catalytic converter production requires palladium or platinum; part of the world supply of these precious metals is produced near Norilsk, Russia, where the industry (among others) has caused Norilsk to be added to Time magazine's list of most-polluted places.[37]
  • The extreme heat of the converters themselves[38] can cause wildfires, especially in dry areas.[39][40][41]

Theft

Because of the external location and the use of valuable precious metals including platinum, palladium and rhodium, catalytic converters are a target for thieves. The problem is especially common among late-model pickup trucks and truck-based SUVs, because of their high ground clearance and easily removed bolt-on catalytic converters. Welded-on converters are also at risk of theft, as they can be easily cut off. The Toyota Prius catalytic converters are also targets for thieves, as their condition tends to be better due to reduced combustion engine operating hours.[42][43][44] Pipecutters are often used to quietly remove the converter[45][46] but other tools such as a portable reciprocating saw can damage other components of the car, such as the alternator, wiring or fuel lines, with potentially dangerous consequences. Rising metal prices in the U.S. during the 2000s commodities boom led to a significant increase in converter theft. A catalytic converter can cost more than $1,000 to replace, more if the vehicle is damaged during the theft.[47][48][49] Thefts of catalytic converters rose over tenfold in the United States during late 2010s-early 2020s, driven presumably by the rise in the price of precious metals contained within the converters.[50]

From 2019–2020, thieves in the United Kingdom were targeting older-model hybrid cars (such as Toyota's hybrids) which have more precious metals than newer vehicles—sometimes worth more than the value of the car—leading to scarcity and long delays in replacing them.[51]

In 2021 a trend emerged in the Democratic Republic of Congo where catalytic converters were stolen for use in drug production.[52]

Diagnostics

Various jurisdictions now require on-board diagnostics to monitor the function and condition of the emissions-control system, including the catalytic converter. Vehicles equipped with OBD-II diagnostic systems are designed to alert the driver to a misfire condition by means of illuminating the "check engine" light on the dashboard, or flashing it if the current misfire conditions are severe enough to potentially damage the catalytic converter.[citation needed]

On-board diagnostic systems take several forms.

Temperature sensors are used for two purposes. The first is as a warning system, typically on two-way catalytic converters such as are still sometimes used on LPG forklifts. The function of the sensor is to warn of catalytic converter temperature above the safe limit of 750 °C (1,380 °F). Modern catalytic-converter designs are not as susceptible to temperature damage and can withstand sustained temperatures of 900 °C (1,650 °F).[citation needed] Temperature sensors are also used to monitor catalyst functioning: usually two sensors will be fitted, with one before the catalyst and one after to monitor the temperature rise over the catalytic-converter core.[citation needed]

The oxygen sensor is the basis of the closed-loop control system on a spark-ignited rich-burn engine; however, it is also used for diagnostics. In vehicles with OBD II, a second oxygen sensor is fitted after the catalytic converter to monitor the O2 levels. The O2 levels are monitored to see the efficiency of the burn process. The on-board computer makes comparisons between the readings of the two sensors. The readings are taken by voltage measurements. If both sensors show the same output or the rear O2 is "switching", the computer recognizes that the catalytic converter either is not functioning or has been removed, and will operate a malfunction indicator lamp and affect engine performance. Simple "oxygen sensor simulators" have been developed to circumvent this problem by simulating the change across the catalytic converter with plans and pre-assembled devices available on the Internet. Although these are not legal for on-road use, they have been used with mixed results.[53] Similar devices apply an offset to the sensor signals, allowing the engine to run a more fuel-economical lean burn that may, however, damage the engine or the catalytic converter.[54]

NOx sensors are extremely expensive and are in general used only when a compression-ignition engine is fitted with a selective catalytic-reduction (SCR) converter, or a NOx absorber in a feedback system. When fitted to an SCR system, there may be one or two sensors. When one sensor is fitted it will be pre-catalyst; when two are fitted, the second one will be post-catalyst. They are used for the same reasons and in the same manner as an oxygen sensor; the only difference is the substance being monitored.[citation needed]

See also

References

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  45. ^ "Catalytic converters are being stolen for valuable metals". 11 December 2019 – via www.rte.ie. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  46. ^ "Cotati police bust catalytic converter theft suspects". 29 November 2019.
  47. ^ "Thieves Nationwide Are Slithering Under Cars, Swiping Catalytic Converters". The New York Times. 9 February 2021. Archived from the original on 28 December 2021.
  48. ^ Johnson, Alex (12 February 2008). "Stolen in 60 Seconds: The Treasure in Your Car — As Precious Metals Prices Soar, Catalytic Converters Are Targets for Thieves". NBC News. Retrieved 7 January 2011.
  49. ^ "Converters Taken by Car Lot Thieves". PoconoNews. 2 July 2009.
  50. ^ "WATCH: Catalytic converter thefts are skyrocketing. Here's why". PBS NewsHour. 12 August 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  51. ^ "Catalytic converter theft: hybrid car owners face insurance nightmare". the Guardian. 1 February 2020.
  52. ^ Nyemba, Benoit (27 September 2021). "Car-exhaust drug craze alarms Congo's capital". Reuters. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  53. ^ "Settlement Involves Illegal Emission Control 'Defeat Devices' Sold for Autos". 1 June 2007.
  54. ^ "Check Engine Lights Come on for a Reason". Concord Monitor. 12 January 2003.

Further reading

  • Keith, C. D., et al. U.S. Patent 3,441,381: "Apparatus for purifying exhaust gases of an internal combustion engine". 29 April 1969
  • Lachman, I. M. et al. U.S. Patent 3,885,977: "Anisotropic Cordierite Monolith" (Ceramic substrate). 5 November 1973
  • Charles H. Bailey. U.S. Patent 4,094,645: "Combination muffler and catalytic converter having low backpressure". 13 June 1978
  • Charles H. Bailey. U.S. Patent 4,250,146: '"Caseless monolithic catalytic converter". 10 February 1981
  • Srinivasan Gopalakrishnan. GB 2397782 : "Process And Synthesizer For Molecular Engineering of Materials". 13 March 2002.

catalytic, converter, catalytic, converter, exhaust, emission, control, device, that, converts, toxic, gases, pollutants, exhaust, from, internal, combustion, engine, into, less, toxic, pollutants, catalyzing, redox, reaction, usually, used, with, internal, co. A catalytic converter is an exhaust emission control device that converts toxic gases and pollutants in exhaust gas from an internal combustion engine into less toxic pollutants by catalyzing a redox reaction Catalytic converters are usually used with internal combustion engines fueled by gasoline or diesel including lean burn engines and sometimes on kerosene heaters and stoves A three way catalytic converter on a gasoline powered 1996 Dodge Ram Simulation of flow inside a catalytic converter The first widespread introduction of catalytic converters was in the United States automobile market To comply with the U S Environmental Protection Agency s stricter regulation of exhaust emissions most gasoline powered vehicles starting with the 1975 model year are equipped with catalytic converters 1 2 3 These two way converters combine oxygen with carbon monoxide CO and unburned hydrocarbons HC to produce carbon dioxide CO2 and water H2O Although two way converters on gasoline engines were rendered obsolete in 1981 by three way converters that also reduce oxides of nitrogen NOx 4 they are still used on lean burn engines to oxidize particulate matter and hydrocarbon emissions including Diesel engines which typically use lean combustion as three way converters require fuel rich or stoichiometric combustion to successfully reduce NOx Although catalytic converters are most commonly applied to exhaust systems in automobiles they are also used on electrical generators forklifts mining equipment trucks buses locomotives motorcycles and on ships They are even used on some wood stoves to control emissions 5 This is usually in response to government regulation either through environmental regulation or through health and safety regulations Contents 1 History 2 Construction 3 Placement of catalytic converters 4 Types 4 1 Two way 4 2 Three way 4 2 1 Unwanted reactions 4 3 Diesel engines 4 4 Lean burn spark ignition engines 5 Installation 6 Damage 7 Regulations 8 Effect on exhaust flow 9 Dangers 9 1 Warm up period 9 2 Environmental effect 10 Theft 11 Diagnostics 12 See also 13 References 14 Further readingHistory EditCatalytic converter prototypes were first designed in France at the end of the 19th century when only a few thousand oil cars were on the roads these prototypes had inert clay based materials coated with platinum rhodium and palladium and sealed into a double metallic cylinder 6 A few decades later a catalytic converter was patented by Eugene Houdry a French mechanical engineer Houdry was an expert in catalytic oil refining having invented the catalytic cracking process that all modern refining is based on today 7 Houdry moved to the United States in 1930 to live near the refineries in the Philadelphia area and develop his catalytic refining process When the results of early studies of smog in Los Angeles were published Houdry became concerned about the role of smokestack exhaust and automobile exhaust in air pollution and founded a company called Oxy Catalyst Houdry first developed catalytic converters for smokestacks called cats for short and later developed catalytic converters for warehouse forklifts that used low grade unleaded gasoline 8 In the mid 1950s he began research to develop catalytic converters for gasoline engines used on cars and was awarded United States Patent 2 742 437 for his work 9 Catalytic converters were further developed by a series of engineers including Carl D Keith John J Mooney Antonio Eleazar and Phillip Messina at Engelhard Corporation 10 11 creating the first production catalytic converter in 1973 12 unreliable source The first widespread introduction of catalytic converters was in the United States automobile market To comply with the U S Environmental Protection Agency s new regulation of exhaust emissions most gasoline powered vehicles starting with the 1975 model year are equipped with catalytic converters These two way converters combined oxygen with carbon monoxide CO and unburned hydrocarbons HC chemical compounds in fuel of the form CmHn to produce carbon dioxide CO2 and water H2O 4 1 2 3 These stringent emission control regulations forced the removal of the antiknock agent tetraethyl lead from automotive gasoline to reduce lead in the air Lead is a catalyst poison and would effectively destroy a catalytic converter by coating the catalyst s surface Requiring the removal of lead allowed the use of catalytic converters to meet the other emission standards in the regulations 13 William C Pfefferle developed a catalytic combustor for gas turbines in the early 1970s allowing combustion without significant formation of nitrogen oxides and carbon monoxide 14 15 Construction Edit Cutaway of a metal core converter Ceramic core converter The catalytic converter s construction is as follows The catalyst support or substrate For automotive catalytic converters the core is usually a ceramic monolith that has a honeycomb structure commonly square not hexagonal Prior to the mid 1980s the catalyst material was deposited on a packed bed of alumina pellets in early GM applications Metallic foil monoliths made of Kanthal FeCrAl 16 are used in applications where particularly high heat resistance is required 16 The substrate is structured to produce a large surface area The cordierite ceramic substrate used in most catalytic converters was invented by Rodney Bagley Irwin Lachman and Ronald Lewis at Corning Glass for which they were inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2002 4 The washcoat A washcoat is a carrier for the catalytic materials and is used to disperse the materials over a large surface area Aluminum oxide titanium dioxide silicon dioxide e g colloidal silica or a mixture of silica and alumina can be used The catalytic materials are suspended in the washcoat prior to applying to the core Washcoat materials are selected to form a rough irregular surface which increases the surface area compared to the smooth surface of the bare substrate 17 Ceria or ceria zirconia These oxides are mainly added as oxygen storage promoters 18 The catalyst itself is most often a mix of precious metals mostly from the platinum group Platinum is the most active catalyst and is widely used but is not suitable for all applications because of unwanted additional reactions and historically high cost Palladium and rhodium are two other precious metals used though as of February 2023 platinum has become the least expensive of the platinum group metals Rhodium is used as a reduction catalyst palladium is used as an oxidation catalyst and platinum is used both for reduction and oxidation Cerium iron manganese and nickel are also used although each has limitations Nickel is not legal for use in the European Union because of its reaction with carbon monoxide into toxic nickel tetracarbonyl citation needed Copper can be used everywhere except Japan clarification needed Upon failure a catalytic converter can be recycled into scrap The precious metals inside the converter including platinum palladium and rhodium are extracted Placement of catalytic converters EditCatalytic converters require a temperature of 400 C 752 F to operate effectively Therefore they are placed as close to the engine as possible or one or more smaller catalytic converters known as pre cats are placed immediately after the exhaust manifold Types EditTwo way Edit A 2 way or oxidation sometimes called an oxi cat catalytic converter has two simultaneous tasks Oxidation of carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide 2 CO O2 2 CO2 Oxidation of hydrocarbons unburnt and partially burned fuel to carbon dioxide and water CxH2x 2 3x 1 2 O2 x CO2 x 1 H2O a combustion reaction This type of catalytic converter is widely used on diesel engines to reduce hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions They were also used on gasoline engines in American and Canadian market automobiles until 1981 Because of their inability to control oxides of nitrogen they were superseded by three way converters Three way Edit Three way catalytic converters have the additional advantage of controlling the emission of nitric oxide NO and nitrogen dioxide NO2 both together abbreviated with NOx and not to be confused with nitrous oxide N2O NOx species are precursors to acid rain and smog 19 Since 1981 three way oxidation reduction catalytic converters have been used in vehicle emission control systems in the United States and Canada many other countries have also adopted stringent vehicle emission regulations that in effect require three way converters on gasoline powered vehicles The reduction and oxidation catalysts are typically contained in a common housing however in some instances they may be housed separately A three way catalytic converter has three simultaneous tasks 19 Reduction of nitrogen oxides to nitrogen N2 C 2 NO 2 CO 2 2 NO displaystyle text C 2 text NO 2 rightarrow text CO 2 2 text NO CO NO CO 2 1 2 N 2 displaystyle text CO text NO rightarrow text CO 2 frac 1 2 text N 2 2 CO NO 2 2 CO 2 1 2 N 2 displaystyle 2 text CO text NO 2 rightarrow 2 text CO 2 frac 1 2 text N 2 H 2 NO H 2 O 1 2 N 2 displaystyle text H 2 text NO rightarrow text H 2 text O frac 1 2 text N 2 Oxidation of carbon hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide C O 2 CO 2 displaystyle text C text O 2 rightarrow text CO 2 CO 1 2 O 2 CO 2 displaystyle text CO frac 1 2 text O 2 rightarrow text CO 2 a C x H y b O 2 c CO 2 d H 2 O a b c d x y Z displaystyle a text C x text H y b text O 2 rightarrow c text CO 2 d text H 2 text O qquad a b c d x y in mathbb Z These three reactions occur most efficiently when the catalytic converter receives exhaust from an engine running slightly above the stoichiometric point For gasoline combustion this ratio is between 14 6 and 14 8 parts air to one part fuel by weight The ratio for autogas or liquefied petroleum gas LPG natural gas and ethanol fuels can vary significantly for each notably so with oxygenated or alcohol based fuels with e85 requiring approximately 34 more fuel requiring modified fuel system tuning and components when using those fuels In general engines fitted with 3 way catalytic converters are equipped with a computerized closed loop feedback fuel injection system using one or more oxygen sensors citation needed though early in the deployment of three way converters carburetors equipped with feedback mixture control were used Three way converters are effective when the engine is operated within a narrow band of air fuel ratios near the stoichiometric point 20 Total conversion efficiency falls very rapidly when the engine is operated outside of this band Slightly lean of stoichiometric the exhaust gases from the engine contain excess oxygen the production of NOx by the engine increases and the efficiency of the catalyst at reducing NOx falls off rapidly However the conversion of HC and CO is very efficient due to the available oxygen oxidizing to H2O and CO2 Slightly rich of stoichiometric the production of CO and unburnt HC by the engine starts to increase dramatically available oxygen decreases and the efficiency of the catalyst for oxidizing CO and HC decreases significantly especially as stored oxygen becomes depleted However the efficiency of the catalyst at reducing NOx is good and the production of NOx by the engine decreases To maintain catalyst efficiency the air fuel ratio must stay close to stoichiometric and not remain rich or lean for too long Closed loop engine control systems are used for effective operation of three way catalytic converters because of this continuous rich lean balance required for effective NOx reduction and HC CO oxidation The control system allows the catalyst to release oxygen during slightly rich operating conditions which oxidizes CO and HC under conditions that also favor the reduction of NOx Before the stored oxygen is depleted the control system shifts the air fuel ratio to become slightly lean improving HC and CO oxidation while storing additional oxygen in the catalyst material at a small penalty in NOx reduction efficiency Then the air fuel mixture is brought back to slightly rich at a small penalty in CO and HC oxidation efficiency and the cycle repeats Efficiency is improved when this oscillation around the stoichiometric point is small and carefully controlled 21 Closed loop control under light to moderate load is accomplished by using one or more oxygen sensors in the exhaust system When oxygen is detected by the sensor the air fuel ratio is lean of stoichiometric and when oxygen is not detected it is rich The control system adjusts the rate of fuel being injected into the engine based on this signal to keep the air fuel ratio near the stoichiometric point in order to maximize the catalyst conversion efficiency The control algorithm is also affected by the time delay between the adjustment of the fuel flow rate and the sensing of the changed air fuel ratio by the sensor as well as the sigmoidal response of the oxygen sensors Typical control systems are designed to rapidly sweep the air fuel ratio such that it oscillates slightly around the stoichiometric point staying near the optimal efficiency point while managing the levels of stored oxygen and unburnt HC 20 Closed loop control is often not used during high load maximum power operation when an increase in emissions is permitted and a rich mixture is commanded to increase power and prevent exhaust gas temperature from exceeding design limits This presents a challenge for control system and catalyst design During such operations large amounts of unburnt HC are produced by the engine well beyond the capacity of the catalyst to release oxygen The surface of the catalyst quickly becomes saturated with HC When returning to lower power output and leaner air fuel ratios the control system must prevent excessive oxygen from reaching the catalyst too quickly as this will rapidly burn the HC in the already hot catalyst potentially exceeding the design temperature limit of the catalyst Excessive catalyst temperature can prematurely age the catalyst reducing its efficiency before reaching its design lifetime Excessive catalyst temperature can also be caused by cylinder misfire which continuously flows unburnt HC combined with oxygen to the hot catalyst burning in the catalyst and increasing its temperature 22 Unwanted reactions Edit Unwanted reactions result in the formation of hydrogen sulfide and ammonia which poison catalysts Nickel or manganese is sometimes added to the washcoat to limit hydrogen sulfide emissions citation needed Sulfur free or low sulfur fuels eliminate or minimize problems with hydrogen sulfide Diesel engines Edit For compression ignition i e diesel engines the most commonly used catalytic converter is the diesel oxidation catalyst DOC DOCs contain palladium and or platinum supported on alumina This catalyst converts particulate matter PM hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide and water These converters often operate at 90 percent efficiency virtually eliminating diesel odor and helping reduce visible particulates These catalysts are ineffective for NOx so NOx emissions from diesel engines are controlled by exhaust gas recirculation EGR In 2010 most light duty diesel manufacturers in the U S added catalytic systems to their vehicles to meet federal emissions requirements Two techniques have been developed for the catalytic reduction of NOx emissions under lean exhaust conditions selective catalytic reduction SCR and the NOx adsorber Instead of precious metal containing NOx absorbers most manufacturers selected base metal SCR systems that use a reagent such as ammonia to reduce the NOx into nitrogen and water 23 Ammonia is supplied to the catalyst system by the injection of urea into the exhaust which then undergoes thermal decomposition and hydrolysis into ammonia The urea solution is also referred to as diesel exhaust fluid DEF Diesel exhaust contains relatively high levels of particulate matter Catalytic converters remove only 20 40 of PM so particulates are cleaned up by a soot trap or diesel particulate filter DPF In the U S all on road light medium and heavy duty diesel powered vehicles built after 1 January 2007 are subject to diesel particulate emission limits and so are equipped with a 2 way catalytic converter and a diesel particulate filter citation needed As long as the engine was manufactured before 1 January 2007 the vehicle is not required to have the DPF system citation needed This led to an inventory runup by engine manufacturers in late 2006 so they could continue selling pre DPF vehicles well into 2007 24 Lean burn spark ignition engines Edit For lean burn spark ignition engines an oxidation catalyst is used in the same manner as in a diesel engine Emissions from lean burn spark ignition engines are very similar to emissions from a diesel compression ignition engine Installation EditMany vehicles have a close coupled catalytic converter located near the engine s exhaust manifold The converter heats up quickly due to its exposure to the very hot exhaust gases enabling it to reduce undesirable emissions during the engine warm up period This is achieved by burning off the excess hydrocarbons which result from the extra rich mixture required for a cold start When catalytic converters were first introduced most vehicles used carburetors that provided a relatively rich air fuel ratio Oxygen O2 levels in the exhaust stream were therefore generally insufficient for the catalytic reaction to occur efficiently Most designs of the time therefore included secondary air injection which injected air into the exhaust stream This increased the available oxygen allowing the catalyst to function as intended Some three way catalytic converter systems have air injection systems with the air injected between the first NOx reduction and second HC and CO oxidation stages of the converter As in two way converters this injected air provides oxygen for the oxidation reactions An upstream air injection point ahead of the catalytic converter is also sometimes present to provide additional oxygen only during the engine warm up period This causes unburned fuel to ignite in the exhaust tract thereby preventing it reaching the catalytic converter at all This technique reduces the engine runtime needed for the catalytic converter to reach its light off or operating temperature Most newer vehicles have electronic fuel injection systems and do not require air injection systems in their exhausts Instead they provide a precisely controlled air fuel mixture that quickly and continually cycles between lean and rich combustion Oxygen sensors monitor the exhaust oxygen content before and after the catalytic converter and the engine control unit uses this information to adjust the fuel injection so as to prevent the first NOx reduction catalyst from becoming oxygen loaded while simultaneously ensuring the second HC and CO oxidation catalyst is sufficiently oxygen saturated Damage EditCatalyst poisoning occurs when the catalytic converter is exposed to exhaust containing substances that coat the working surfaces so that they cannot contact and react with the exhaust The most notable contaminant is lead so vehicles equipped with catalytic converters can run only on unleaded fuel Other common catalyst poisons include sulfur manganese originating primarily from the gasoline additive MMT and silicon which can enter the exhaust stream if the engine has a leak that allows coolant into the combustion chamber Phosphorus is another catalyst contaminant Although phosphorus is no longer used in gasoline it and zinc another low level catalyst contaminant was widely used in engine oil antiwear additives such as zinc dithiophosphate ZDDP Beginning in 2004 a limit of phosphorus concentration in engine oils was adopted in the API SM and ILSAC GF 4 specifications Depending on the contaminant catalyst poisoning can sometimes be reversed by running the engine under a very heavy load for an extended period of time citation needed The increased exhaust temperature can sometimes vaporize or sublimate the contaminant removing it from the catalytic surface citation needed However removal of lead deposits in this manner is usually not possible because of lead s high boiling point 25 Any condition that causes abnormally high levels of unburned hydrocarbons raw or partially burnt fuel or oils to reach the converter will tend to significantly elevate its temperature bringing the risk of a meltdown of the substrate and resultant catalytic deactivation and severe exhaust restriction These conditions include failure of the upstream components of the exhaust system manifold header assembly and associated clamps susceptible to rust corrosion and or fatigue e g the exhaust manifold splintering after repeated heat cycling ignition system e g coil packs and or primary ignition components e g distributor cap wires ignition coil and spark plugs and or damaged fuel system components fuel injectors fuel pressure regulator and associated sensors Oil and or coolant leaks perhaps caused by a head gasket leak can also cause high unburned hydrocarbons Regulations EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Emissions regulations vary considerably from jurisdiction to jurisdiction Most automobile spark ignition engines in North America have been fitted with catalytic converters since 1975 4 1 2 3 and the technology used in non automotive applications is generally based on automotive technology In many jurisdictions it is illegal to remove or disable a catalytic converter for any reason other than its direct and immediate replacement Nevertheless some vehicle owners remove or gut the catalytic converter on their vehicle 26 27 In such cases the converter may be replaced by a welded in section of ordinary pipe or a flanged test pipe ostensibly meant to check if the converter is clogged by comparing how the engine runs with and without the converter This facilitates temporary reinstallation of the converter in order to pass an emission test 28 In the United States it is a violation of Section 203 a 3 A of the 1990 amended Clean Air Act for a vehicle repair shop to remove a converter from a vehicle or cause a converter to be removed from a vehicle except in order to replace it with another converter 29 and Section 203 a 3 B makes it illegal for any person to sell or to install any part that would bypass defeat or render inoperative any emission control system device or design element Vehicles without functioning catalytic converters generally fail emission inspections The automotive aftermarket supplies high flow converters for vehicles with upgraded engines or whose owners prefer an exhaust system with larger than stock capacity 30 Catalytic converters have been mandatory on all new gasoline cars sold in the European Union and the United Kingdom since January 1 1993 in order to comply with the Euro 1 emission standards 31 Effect on exhaust flow EditFaulty catalytic converters as well as undamaged early types of converters can restrict the flow of exhaust which negatively affects vehicle performance and fuel economy 26 Modern catalytic converters do not significantly restrict exhaust flow A 2006 test on a 1999 Honda Civic for example showed that removing the stock catalytic converter netted only a 3 increase in maximum horsepower a new metallic core converter only cost the car 1 horsepower compared to no converter 28 Dangers EditCarburetors on pre 1981 vehicles without feedback fuel air mixture control could easily provide too much fuel to the engine which could cause the catalytic converter to overheat and potentially ignite flammable materials under the car 32 Warm up period Edit Vehicles fitted with catalytic converters emit most of their total pollution during the first five minutes of engine operation for example before the catalytic converter has warmed up sufficiently to be fully effective 33 In the early 2000s it became common to place the catalyst converter right next to the exhaust manifold close to the engine for much quicker warm up In 1995 Alpina introduced an electrically heated catalyst Called E KAT it was used in Alpina s B12 5 7 E KAT based on the BMW 750i 34 Heating coils inside the catalytic converter assemblies are electrified just after the engine is started bringing the catalyst up to operating temperature very quickly to qualify the vehicle for low emission vehicle LEV designation 35 BMW later introduced the same heated catalyst developed jointly by Emitec Alpina and BMW 34 in its 750i in 1999 35 Some vehicles contain a pre cat a small catalytic converter upstream of the main catalytic converter which heats up faster on vehicle start up reducing the emissions associated with cold starts A pre cat is most commonly used by an auto manufacturer when trying to attain the Ultra Low Emissions Vehicle ULEV rating such as on the Toyota MR2 Roadster 36 Environmental effect Edit Catalytic converters have proven to be reliable and effective in reducing noxious tailpipe emissions However they also have some shortcomings in use and also adverse environmental effects in production An engine equipped with a three way catalyst must run at the stoichiometric point which means more fuel is consumed than in a lean burn engine This means approximately 10 more CO2 emissions from the vehicle citation needed Catalytic converter production requires palladium or platinum part of the world supply of these precious metals is produced near Norilsk Russia where the industry among others has caused Norilsk to be added to Time magazine s list of most polluted places 37 The extreme heat of the converters themselves 38 can cause wildfires especially in dry areas 39 40 41 Theft EditBecause of the external location and the use of valuable precious metals including platinum palladium and rhodium catalytic converters are a target for thieves The problem is especially common among late model pickup trucks and truck based SUVs because of their high ground clearance and easily removed bolt on catalytic converters Welded on converters are also at risk of theft as they can be easily cut off The Toyota Prius catalytic converters are also targets for thieves as their condition tends to be better due to reduced combustion engine operating hours 42 43 44 Pipecutters are often used to quietly remove the converter 45 46 but other tools such as a portable reciprocating saw can damage other components of the car such as the alternator wiring or fuel lines with potentially dangerous consequences Rising metal prices in the U S during the 2000s commodities boom led to a significant increase in converter theft A catalytic converter can cost more than 1 000 to replace more if the vehicle is damaged during the theft 47 48 49 Thefts of catalytic converters rose over tenfold in the United States during late 2010s early 2020s driven presumably by the rise in the price of precious metals contained within the converters 50 From 2019 2020 thieves in the United Kingdom were targeting older model hybrid cars such as Toyota s hybrids which have more precious metals than newer vehicles sometimes worth more than the value of the car leading to scarcity and long delays in replacing them 51 In 2021 a trend emerged in the Democratic Republic of Congo where catalytic converters were stolen for use in drug production 52 Diagnostics EditVarious jurisdictions now require on board diagnostics to monitor the function and condition of the emissions control system including the catalytic converter Vehicles equipped with OBD II diagnostic systems are designed to alert the driver to a misfire condition by means of illuminating the check engine light on the dashboard or flashing it if the current misfire conditions are severe enough to potentially damage the catalytic converter citation needed On board diagnostic systems take several forms Temperature sensors are used for two purposes The first is as a warning system typically on two way catalytic converters such as are still sometimes used on LPG forklifts The function of the sensor is to warn of catalytic converter temperature above the safe limit of 750 C 1 380 F Modern catalytic converter designs are not as susceptible to temperature damage and can withstand sustained temperatures of 900 C 1 650 F citation needed Temperature sensors are also used to monitor catalyst functioning usually two sensors will be fitted with one before the catalyst and one after to monitor the temperature rise over the catalytic converter core citation needed The oxygen sensor is the basis of the closed loop control system on a spark ignited rich burn engine however it is also used for diagnostics In vehicles with OBD II a second oxygen sensor is fitted after the catalytic converter to monitor the O2 levels The O2 levels are monitored to see the efficiency of the burn process The on board computer makes comparisons between the readings of the two sensors The readings are taken by voltage measurements If both sensors show the same output or the rear O2 is switching the computer recognizes that the catalytic converter either is not functioning or has been removed and will operate a malfunction indicator lamp and affect engine performance Simple oxygen sensor simulators have been developed to circumvent this problem by simulating the change across the catalytic converter with plans and pre assembled devices available on the Internet Although these are not legal for on road use they have been used with mixed results 53 Similar devices apply an offset to the sensor signals allowing the engine to run a more fuel economical lean burn that may however damage the engine or the catalytic converter 54 NOx sensors are extremely expensive and are in general used only when a compression ignition engine is fitted with a selective catalytic reduction SCR converter or a NOx absorber in a feedback system When fitted to an SCR system there may be one or two sensors When one sensor is fitted it will be pre catalyst when two are fitted the second one will be post catalyst They are used for the same reasons and in the same manner as an oxygen sensor the only difference is the substance being monitored citation needed See also EditCatalytic heater Cerium III oxide NOx adsorber Roadway air dispersion modelingReferences Edit a b c Petersen Publishing 1975 The Catalytic Converter In Erwin M Rosen ed The Petersen Automotive Troubleshooting amp Repair Manual New York NY Grosset amp Dunlap p 493 ISBN 978 0 448 11946 5 For years the exhaust system remained virtually unchanged until 1975 when a strange new component was added It s called a catalytic converter a b c General Motors Believes it has an Answer to the Automotive Air Pollution Problem The Blade Toledo Ohio 12 September 1974 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a b c Catalytic Converter Heads Auto Fuel Economy Efforts The Milwaukee Sentinel 11 November 1974 Retrieved 14 December 2011 permanent dead link a b c d Palucka Tim Winter 2004 Doing the Impossible Invention amp Technology 19 3 Archived from the original on 3 December 2008 Retrieved 14 December 2011 Choosing the Right Wood Stove Burn Wise US EPA Retrieved 2 January 2012 Castaignede Laurent 2018 Airvore ou la face obscure des transports chronique d une pollution annoncee Montreal Quebec ecosociete pp 109 110 and illustration p 7 ISBN 9782897193591 OCLC 1030881466 Csere Csaba January 1988 10 Best Engineering Breakthroughs Car and Driver 33 7 63 Exhaust Gas Made Safe Popular Mechanics September 1951 p 134 bottom of page His Smoke Eating Cats Now Attack Traffic Smog Popular Science June 1955 pp 83 85 244 registration required Carl D Keith a Father of the Catalytic Converter Dies at 88 The New York Times 15 November 2008 Roberts Sam 25 June 2020 John J Mooney an Inventor of the Catalytic Converter Dies at 90 The New York Times Staff writer undated Engelhard Corporation referenceforbusiness com Retrieved 7 January 2011 Eugene Houdry Science History Institute June 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2016 Robert N Carter Lance L Smith Hasan Karim Marco Castaldi Shah Etemad George Muench R Samuel Boorse Paul Menacherry and William C Pfefferle 1998 Catalytic Combustion Technology Development for Gas Turbine Engine Applications MRS Proceedings 549 93 doi 10 1557 PROC 549 93 Worthy Sharon Connecticut chemist receives award for cleaner air technology Bio Medicine 23 June 2003 Retrieved 11 December 2012 a b Pischinger Univ Prof Dr Ing Stephan 2011 Verbrennungsmotoren Band 2 24 ed Aachen Germany Lehrstuhl Fur Verbrennungskraftmachinen p 335 Martin Votsmeier Thomas Kreuzer Jurgen Gieshoff Gerhard Lepperhoff Automobile exhaust Control in Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley VCH 2002 DOI 10 1002 14356007 a03 189 pub2 Kaspar J Fornasiero P Graziani M 1999 Use of CeO2 based oxides in the three way catalysis Catalysis Today 50 2 285 298 doi 10 1016 S0920 5861 98 00510 0 ISSN 0920 5861 a b Kaspar Jan Fornasiero Paolo Hickey Neal 2003 Automotive Catalytic Converters Current Status and Some Perspectives Catalysis Today 77 4 419 449 doi 10 1016 S0920 5861 02 00384 X a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b The three way catalytic converter Brandt Erich Wang Yanying Grizzle Jessy 2000 Dynamic Modeling of a Three Way Catalyst for SI Engine Exhaust Emission Control PDF IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology 8 5 767 776 doi 10 1109 87 865850 Durability of Platinum Containing Automotive Exhaust Control Catalysts Air Pollution Control Technology Fact Sheet PDF US Environmental Protection Agency PDF Heavy Duty Engine and Vehicle Standards and Highway Diesel Fuel Sulfur Control Requirements PDF 19 August 2015 123 KB Which cars are least likely to have catalytic converter stolen Auto Ride Of Reading 15 July 2022 a b Crutsinger Martin 29 September 1982 Kits to Foil Auto Pollution Control Are Selling Well The Gainesville Sun Some of Us Can Only Afford a Clunker The Palm Beach Post 23 February 1996 a b Beat the Law Import Tuner 1 October 2006 Archived from the original on 28 February 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2011 Sale and Use of Aftermarket Catalytic Converters US Environmental Protection Agency US Federal Register Volume 51 Tanner Keith Mazda MX 5 Miata Motorbooks p 120 Euro emissions standards AA www theaa com Retrieved 31 December 2022 Ullman Owen 14 June 1976 Catalytic Converter Still Controversial after Two Years of Use The Bulletin clarification needed Catalytic converters nsls bnl gov a b Milestones alpina automobiles com Archived from the original on 30 June 2015 Retrieved 5 June 2015 a b Edgar Julian 5 October 1999 Goodbye 12 volts hello 42 volts Autospeed Archived from the original on 28 May 2012 Retrieved 2 January 2012 The current model BMW 750iL has a maximum electrical load of 428 amps 5 9 kW In this car over half of the maximum load is from the short term electrical heating of the catalytic converters Pre cats What You Should Know Toyota Owners Club Toyota Forum Retrieved 15 April 2018 Walsh Bryan 12 September 2007 Norilsk Russia The World s Most Polluted Places Time Archived from the original on 31 October 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2011 Here s how to avoid accidentally starting the next firestorm pe com 6 September 2016 Catalytic converter started fires are common ocregister com 18 November 2008 Retrieved 15 April 2018 Catalytic converter blamed for causing SR 52 brush fire fox5sandiego com 29 June 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2018 Crews have 400 acre Jennings Fire in Lakeside 100 percent contai KUSI News San Diego CA Archived from the original on 14 July 2017 Retrieved 14 July 2017 Fraga Brian 30 November 2011 Carver police investigating catalytic converter thefts South Coast Today Retrieved 21 December 2011 Medici Joe 31 July 2007 Underhanded thieves Chroniclet com Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Murr Andrew 9 January 2008 An Exhausting New Crime What Thieves Are Stealing from Today s Cars Newsweek Retrieved 7 January 2011 Catalytic converters are being stolen for valuable metals 11 December 2019 via www rte ie a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Cotati police bust catalytic converter theft suspects 29 November 2019 Thieves Nationwide Are Slithering Under Cars Swiping Catalytic Converters The New York Times 9 February 2021 Archived from the original on 28 December 2021 Johnson Alex 12 February 2008 Stolen in 60 Seconds The Treasure in Your Car As Precious Metals Prices Soar Catalytic Converters Are Targets for Thieves NBC News Retrieved 7 January 2011 Converters Taken by Car Lot Thieves PoconoNews 2 July 2009 WATCH Catalytic converter thefts are skyrocketing Here s why PBS NewsHour 12 August 2022 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Catalytic converter theft hybrid car owners face insurance nightmare the Guardian 1 February 2020 Nyemba Benoit 27 September 2021 Car exhaust drug craze alarms Congo s capital Reuters Retrieved 8 October 2021 Settlement Involves Illegal Emission Control Defeat Devices Sold for Autos 1 June 2007 Check Engine Lights Come on for a Reason Concord Monitor 12 January 2003 Further reading EditKeith C D et al U S Patent 3 441 381 Apparatus for purifying exhaust gases of an internal combustion engine 29 April 1969 Lachman I M et al U S Patent 3 885 977 Anisotropic Cordierite Monolith Ceramic substrate 5 November 1973 Charles H Bailey U S Patent 4 094 645 Combination muffler and catalytic converter having low backpressure 13 June 1978 Charles H Bailey U S Patent 4 250 146 Caseless monolithic catalytic converter 10 February 1981 Srinivasan Gopalakrishnan GB 2397782 Process And Synthesizer For Molecular Engineering of Materials 13 March 2002 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catalytic converter amp oldid 1142740356, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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