Mixer and emissions cleaning module

US9920676B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9920676-B2
Application numberUS-201414782982-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateApr 11, 2014
Priority dateApr 11, 2013
Publication dateMar 20, 2018
Grant dateMar 20, 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.

A mixer for an emissions cleaning module is provided. The mixer having an elongate body configured for location within a flowhood and a downstream conduit of an emissions cleaning module. A plurality of apertures are included in the mixer and configured to permit passage of exhaust gas therethrough, to promote mixing, in use of an injected additive and a flow of exhaust gas. An emissions cleaning module including such a mixer is also described.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

The invention claimed is: 1. A mixer for an emissions cleaning module including an upstream conduit containing a diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) module, the mixer comprising: a downstream conduit; a flowhood fluidly connected to an inlet of the downstream conduit, the flowhood being configured for fluid connection to the upstream conduit; and an elongate body located completely within a volume defined by the flowhood and the downstream conduit, a wall of the elongate body defining a plurality of apertures therethrough, the flowhood being in fluid communication with the downstream conduit via the plurality of apertures. 2. The mixer as claimed in claim 1 , further comprising a plurality of support legs extending from a downstream end of the elongate body and engaged with an inner surface of the downstream conduit to maintain the elongate body in spaced relationship with the downstream conduit. 3. The mixer as claimed in claim 2 , wherein each support leg of the plurality of support legs includes a flared leg support extending outwardly from the elongate body. 4. The mixer as claimed in claim 1 , wherein a downstream end of the elongate body comprises a circumferential flared rim. 5. The mixer as claimed in claim 1 , further comprising an injector module fluidly coupled to the elongate body, wherein an upstream end of the elongate body is open and receives injected fluid from the injector module. 6. The mixer as claimed in claim 5 , wherein the upstream end of the elongate body is mounted to the flowhood. 7. The mixer as claimed in claim 6 , wherein the upstream end of the elongate body is mounted around an outlet of the injector module. 8. The mixer as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the elongate body defines a plurality of scavenging holes therethrough, the plurality of scavenging holes being located at, or towards, an upstream end of the elongate body. 9. The mixer as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the plurality of apertures are arranged in formation around the elongate body so as to induce a swirling flow of gas passing therethrough. 10. The mixer as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the plurality of apertures comprises at least two zones of apertures arranged circumferentially around the elongate body. 11. The mixer as claimed in claim 10 , wherein the at least two zones of apertures includes a first zone of apertures and a second zone of apertures, and the first zone of apertures is located on the elongate body generally facing away from an upstream end of the flowhood and the second zone of apertures is located on the elongate body generally facing towards the upstream end of the flowhood. 12. The mixer as claimed in claim 10 , wherein the at least two zones of apertures includes a first zone of apertures and a second zone of apertures, and each of the first zone of apertures and the second zone of apertures extends approximately around one-third to one-half of a circumference of the elongate body. 13. The mixer as claimed in claim 12 , wherein the first zone of apertures extends around 240° of the circumference of the elongate body and the second zone of apertures extends around 120° of the circumference of the elongate body. 14. An emissions cleaning module comprising: an upstream conduit containing a diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) module; a downstream conduit; a flowhood fluidly connecting an outlet of the upstream conduit to an inlet of the downstream conduit; and a mixer comprising an elongate body located completely within a volume defined by the flowhood and the downstream conduit, a wall of the elongate body defining a plurality of apertures therethrough, the flowhood being in fluid communication with the downstream conduit via the plurality of apertures. 15. The emissions cleaning module as claimed in claim 14 , wherein a downstream end of the mixer terminates prior to a downstream end of the downstream conduit, thereby defining a mixing chamber within the downstream conduit that is located downstream of the mixer. 16. The emissions cleaning module as claimed in claim 14 , wherein a majority of a length of the elongate body of the mixer is located within the flowhood and a minority of the length of the elongate body of the mixer is located within the downstream conduit. 17. The emissions cleaning module as claimed in claim 14 , wherein the flowhood is formed from at least one component that is separate from the upstream conduit and the downstream conduit, the at least one component being fluidly connected between the upstream conduit and the downstream conduit. 18. The emissions cleaning module as claimed in claim 14 , wherein the mixer comprises at least one support leg engaged against an inner surface of the downstream conduit to maintain the mixer in spaced relationship with the downstream conduit. 19. The emissions cleaning module as claimed in claim 18 , wherein the at least one support leg includes a plurality of support legs, and each support leg of the plurality of support legs defines a gap with an adjacent support leg of the plurality of support legs, such that the flowhood is in fluid communication with the downstream conduit along a bypass flow path that includes the gap and that does not include an interior of the elongate body of the mixer. 20. The emissions cleaning module as claimed in claim 14 , wherein the flowhood comprises at least one deflector, the at least one deflector being spaced apart from the elongate body, thereby defining a circulating flow path between the at least one deflector and the elongate body, the at least one deflector being configured to turn a flow within the flowhood to effect a circumferential velocity component about the elongate body.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • F01N3/2892Primary

    Exhaust flow directors or the like, e.g. upstream of catalytic device · CPC title

  • the substance being ammonia or urea · CPC title

  • a flow director or deflector · CPC title

  • Cross-Sectional Technologies · mapped topic

  • the purifying devices are arranged in a single housing · CPC title

Patent family

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What does patent US9920676B2 cover?
A mixer for an emissions cleaning module is provided. The mixer having an elongate body configured for location within a flowhood and a downstream conduit of an emissions cleaning module. A plurality of apertures are included in the mixer and configured to permit passage of exhaust gas therethrough, to promote mixing, in use of an injected additive and a flow of exhaust gas. An emissions cleani…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Perkins Engines Co Ltd
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification F01N3/2892. Mapped technology areas include Mechanical Engineering.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Mar 20 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 1 related publication on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).