The Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system installed on the exhaust line is currently widely used on Diesel heavy-duty trucks and it is considered a promising technique for light and medium duty trucks, large passenger cars and off-highway vehicles, to fulfill future emission legislation. Some vehicles of these last categories, equipped with SCR, have been already put on the market, not only in the US, where the emission legislation on Diesel vehicles is more restrictive, but also in Europe, demonstrating to be already compliant with the upcoming Euro 6. Moreover, new and more stringent emission regulations and homologation cycles are being proposed all over the world, with a consequent rapidly increasing interest for this technology. As a matter of fact, a physical model of the Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) supply system is very useful, not only during the product development phase, but also for the implementation of the on-board real-time controller. This paper describes the activity performed to develop and characterize a 0-D model of the DEF supply system, oriented to model-based control and to the simulation of the system response to fault injections, finalized to diagnosis validation.

Stola, F., De Cesare, M., Lacchini, L., Cavina, N., Sohal, S. (2015). Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) Supply System Modelling for Control and Diagnosis Applications. SAE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINES, 8(1), 350-360 [10.4271/2015-26-0090].

Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) Supply System Modelling for Control and Diagnosis Applications

De Cesare, Matteo;CAVINA, NICOLO';
2015

Abstract

The Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system installed on the exhaust line is currently widely used on Diesel heavy-duty trucks and it is considered a promising technique for light and medium duty trucks, large passenger cars and off-highway vehicles, to fulfill future emission legislation. Some vehicles of these last categories, equipped with SCR, have been already put on the market, not only in the US, where the emission legislation on Diesel vehicles is more restrictive, but also in Europe, demonstrating to be already compliant with the upcoming Euro 6. Moreover, new and more stringent emission regulations and homologation cycles are being proposed all over the world, with a consequent rapidly increasing interest for this technology. As a matter of fact, a physical model of the Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) supply system is very useful, not only during the product development phase, but also for the implementation of the on-board real-time controller. This paper describes the activity performed to develop and characterize a 0-D model of the DEF supply system, oriented to model-based control and to the simulation of the system response to fault injections, finalized to diagnosis validation.
2015
Stola, F., De Cesare, M., Lacchini, L., Cavina, N., Sohal, S. (2015). Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) Supply System Modelling for Control and Diagnosis Applications. SAE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINES, 8(1), 350-360 [10.4271/2015-26-0090].
Stola, Federico; De Cesare, Matteo; Lacchini, Luca; Cavina, Nicolò; Sohal, Sandeep
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/551968
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