Emissions Reduction System For An Internal Combustion Engine
US-2016265492-A1 · Sep 15, 2016 · US
US9488100B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9488100-B2 |
| Application number | US-201313804291-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Mar 14, 2013 |
| Priority date | Mar 22, 2012 |
| Publication date | Nov 8, 2016 |
| Grant date | Nov 8, 2016 |
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A method and apparatus for the oxy-combustion of fuel in an internal combustion engine (ICE) used to power a vehicle converts the free energy available onboard the vehicle in the form of waste heat from the engine exhaust gas stream and coolant system into electrical and/or mechanical energy which energy is used to separate oxygen from air to eliminate or significantly reduce the volume of nitrogen entering the ICE's combustion chamber, and thereby reduce NO x pollutants released into the atmosphere and increase the concentration of CO 2 in the engine exhaust stream for capture using an integrated system to compress and increase the density of the captured CO 2 for temporary on-board storage until it is discharged at a recovery station, e.g., during vehicle refueling.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. An internal combustion engine (ICE) producing an exhaust gas stream having reduced nitrogen and NO x emissions from the combustion of a fuel with an oxygen-enriched atmospheric air stream from which nitrogen has been separated, the ICE having an engine block with a plurality of cylinders having walls forming combustion chambers and one or more channels in fluid communication with the cylinders for delivering the oxygen-enriched air for combustion of the fuel, the improvement comprising: one or more air separation devices integrated with the operation of the ICE and in fluid communication with the engine's air intake and the combustion chambers, the one or more air separation devices being adapted and configured to separate oxygen molecules from the atmospheric air to mix with the fuel and to return nitrogen molecules to the atmosphere, and wherein the one or more air separation devices are membranes and the membranes are positioned in the wall of one or more of the plurality of cylinders, the one or more membranes providing fluid communication for oxygen molecules to pass from the air channels into the combustion chamber. 2. The internal combustion engine of claim 1 in which at least one membrane is positioned in the wall of each of the plurality of cylinders. 3. The ICE of claim 1 which the one or more membranes are displaced away from the zone of maximum pressure created during the respective compression and expansion strokes in the one or more cylinders. 4. The ICE of claim 1 in which at least a portion of the channels are in the form of a manifold and one or more oxygen separation devices are positioned in the manifold. 5. The ICE of claim 4 in which there are a plurality of oxygen separation devices and the devices are positioned in series and the proportional oxygen content of the gas stream is greater downstream of each of the separation devices in the series. 6. The ICE of claim 1 in which the oxygen separation devices are ceramic membranes. 7. The ICE of claim 6 in which the membranes are maintained at a temperature of about 800° F. by heat exchange with hot exhaust gases from the engine. 8. The ICE of claim 1 in which the membrane is a solid ceramic electrolyte with porous electrodes that are oxygen permeable and the solid electrolyte passes oxygen ions under an electrical potential. 9. The ICE of claim 1 in which a portion of the exhaust gas stream from the ICE is recycled and mixed with the intake air. 10. The ICE of claim 1 which includes a turbo-supercharger powered by the exhaust gas stream and in fluid communication with the atmospheric air to pressurize the air upstream of the one or more separation devices. 11. The ICE of claim 1 in which the membrane restricts the passage of nitrogen, NO x and CO 2 from the combustion chamber. 12. The ICE of claim 6 in which the ceramic membrane material is a perovskite type ceramic and releases retained oxygen in response to an increase in temperature. 13. The ICE of claim 4 in which the one or more oxygen separation devices comprise two or more fixed beds containing an adsorbent material that releasably adsorbs oxygen from the air and passes the non-adsorbed gases for discharge into the atmosphere, each of the beds having an inlet for receiving an oxygen-depleted purge gas to release the adsorbed oxygen and an outlet in fluid communication with one or more of the plurality of cylinders for conveying the oxygen-enriched gas stream to mix with the fuel. 14. The ICE of claims 13 in which the purge gas is a portion of the hot exhaust gas from the ICE. 15. The ICE of claim 13 that operates in conjunction with an engine management system having a processor/controller operative linked to at least one oxygen sensor located in the oxygen-depleted gas stream outlet of each of the two or more fixed beds, at least one valve associated with the inlet and outlet of each bed and controlled by the processor controller in response to the amount of oxygen in the oxygen-depleted gas stream to divert air from one bed to at least one other bed and to admit the purge gas to release the adsorbed oxygen for discharge from the bed outlet as the oxygen-enriched stream. 16. The ICE of claim 1 in which the engine's air intake manifold includes a valve operable in response to the engine's performance to open and admit atmospheric air when the engine's requirements for oxygen cannot be met by oxygen passing through the one or more air separation devices. 17. The ICE of claim 13 in which the one or more air separation devices are pressure swing adsorption nitrogen generators. 18. The ICE of claim 13 in which the one or more air separation devices are vacuum swing adsorption systems. 19. The ICE of claim 13 in which the one or more air separation devices are hybrid vacuum-pressure swing adsorption systems. 20. The ICE of claim 1 in which the CO 2 from the exhaust stream is captured and undergoes a densification process for temporary storage on board a vehicle powered by the ICE.
Temperature swing adsorption · CPC title
Nitrogen · CPC title
Pressure swing adsorption · CPC title
characterised by the type of membrane · CPC title
with means for cleaning or treating the recirculated gases, e.g. catalysts, condensate traps, particle filters or heaters · CPC title
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