Recirculating exhaust treatment fluid system

US9903250B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9903250-B2
Application numberUS-201414271811-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateMay 7, 2014
Priority dateMay 7, 2013
Publication dateFeb 27, 2018
Grant dateFeb 27, 2018

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

An exhaust treatment fluid system includes a tank housing for storing an exhaust treatment fluid. A suction tube includes a first end positioned within the housing. A first sensor is positioned within the tank housing for determining at least one of a fluid level and a concentration of the exhaust treatment fluid. A skirt is positioned in the tank to peripherally surround the first sensor.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. An exhaust treatment fluid system, comprising: a tank housing for storing an exhaust treatment fluid; a suction tube having an end positioned within the tank housing; a first sensor positioned in the tank housing for determining at least one of a fluid level and a concentration of the exhaust treatment fluid; and a skirt positioned in the tank housing to peripherally surround the first sensor, wherein the skirt includes a top wall and a peripheral wall, the top wall including an aperture to allow gas to escape from a volume of exhaust treatment fluid positioned between the skirt and the first sensor. 2. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 1 , wherein the skirt is fixed to an interior wall of the tank housing. 3. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 1 , wherein the first sensor includes an ultrasonic sensor. 4. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 1 , further comprising a second sensor positioned in the tank housing, wherein the first sensor determines the fluid level and the second sensor determines the concentration of the exhaust treatment fluid. 5. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 4 , wherein the second sensor is disposed proximate the first sensor. 6. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 5 , wherein at least one of the first and second sensors is coupled to the suction tube. 7. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 5 , wherein the skirt peripherally surrounds the first and second sensors. 8. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 1 , further comprising an elongated laminar flow device secured to a discharge port of the tank housing such that exhaust treatment fluids flow along surfaces thereof as the exhaust treatment fluid is returned to the tank housing, wherein the laminar flow device includes a non-circular cross-section. 9. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 1 , wherein the skirt is fixed to the first sensor. 10. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 1 , wherein the skirt includes separate first and second shells, the first shell being coupled to the second shell. 11. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 1 , further including a temperature sensor peripherally surrounded by the skirt. 12. An exhaust treatment fluid system, comprising: a tank housing for storing an exhaust treatment fluid; a suction tube having an end positioned within the tank housing; a first sensor positioned in the tank housing for determining at least one of a fluid level and a concentration of the exhaust treatment fluid; and a skirt positioned in the tank housing to peripherally surround the first sensor, wherein the skirt includes a plastically deformable leg in a snap-fit coupling with the first sensor. 13. An exhaust treatment fluid system, comprising: a tank housing for storing an exhaust treatment fluid; a suction tube having an end positioned within the tank housing; a first sensor positioned in the tank housing for determining at least one of a fluid level and a concentration of the exhaust treatment fluid; and a skirt positioned in the tank housing to peripherally surround the first sensor, further including a support having a first end fixed to the tank housing and an unsupported second end, the first sensor being fixed to the support. 14. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 13 , wherein the skirt is fixed to the support. 15. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 14 , wherein the skirt includes a plastically deformable leg in a snap-fit coupling with the support. 16. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 13 , wherein the support includes a first tube having an interior volume sealed from contact with the exhaust treatment fluid, the exhaust treatment fluid system including a wire extending through the first tube of the support and coupled to the first sensor. 17. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 16 , wherein the support includes a second tube, the second tube having an interior volume containing the exhaust treatment fluid, the exhaust treatment fluid system further including a float and a sensor operable to output a signal indicative of a position of the float. 18. An exhaust treatment fluid system, comprising: a tank housing for storing an exhaust treatment fluid, the tank housing being adapted to be fixed to a vehicle; a suction tube positioned in the tank housing; an injector including an inlet in fluid communication with the suction tube and an outlet; a return line fluidly interconnecting the outlet of the injector and the tank housing; a sensor positioned in the tank housing for determining at least one of a fluid level and a concentration of the exhaust fluid; and a skirt positioned in the tank housing extending around the sensor to define a zone of exhaust treatment fluid that is shielded from another zone of exhaust treatment fluid within the tank housing, wherein the skirt includes an edge at least partially defining a gap, wherein the exhaust treatment fluid passes through the gap and bubbles within the fluid are restricted from passing through the gap based on a gap size. 19. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 18 , wherein the skirt includes a top wall and a peripheral wall, the top wall including an aperture to allow gas to escape from a volume of exhaust treatment fluid positioned between the skirt and the sensor. 20. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 19 , further including a support having a first end fixed to the tank housing and an unsupported second end, the sensor being fixed to the support. 21. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 20 , wherein the skirt is fixed to the support. 22. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 21 , wherein the skirt includes a plastically deformable leg in a snap-fit coupling with the support. 23. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 18 , wherein the skirt includes a flexible material that is elastically deformable to withstand stress applied when the exhaust treatment fluid freezes and increases in volume. 24. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 18 , further including a temperature sensor positioned within the zone of exhaust treatment fluid that is shielded from the another zone. 25. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 18 , further including another sensor positioned within the tank housing and determining the other of the fluid level and the concentration of the exhaust treatment fluid. 26. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 25 , wherein a controller compares a signal output from the sensor and a signal output from the another sensor with previously stored values and determines whether to start a timer during which the signals are ignored based on the comparison of the signals to the previously stored values. 27. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 26 , wherein the signals from the sensor and the another sensor are ignored only if both signals are out of a desired range when compared to the previously stored values. 28. The exhaust treatment fluid system of claim 18 , wherein the skirt includes separate first and second shells, the first shell being coupled to the second shell. 29. An exhaust treatment fluid system, comprising: a tank housing for storing an exhaust treatment fluid, the tank housing being adapted to be fixed to a vehicle; a suction tube positioned in the tank housing;

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • Systems for adding substances into exhaust · CPC title

  • Controlling the catalytic process · CPC title

  • Storage means for substances, e.g. tanks or reservoirs · CPC title

  • Cross-Sectional Technologies · mapped topic

  • Cross-Sectional Technologies · mapped topic

Patent family

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Frequently asked questions

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What does patent US9903250B2 cover?
An exhaust treatment fluid system includes a tank housing for storing an exhaust treatment fluid. A suction tube includes a first end positioned within the housing. A first sensor is positioned within the tank housing for determining at least one of a fluid level and a concentration of the exhaust treatment fluid. A skirt is positioned in the tank to peripherally surround the first sensor.
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Tenneco Automotive Operating Co Inc
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification F01N11/00. Mapped technology areas include Mechanical Engineering.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Feb 27 2018 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).