Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:04
Hi Guys,
Here's a bit of a blurb I wrote about EGR in a post a few months back:
"The dreaded EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculation) - never been able to work out the logic of it meself...
The theory goes: very high combustion temperatures cause nitrogen and oxygen in the combustion air to combine to form oxides of nitrogen (I think the bad ones are NO & NO2,). Whichever ones, these are the major culprits in forming photo-chemical smog in large cities, so the powers that be have declared that vehicles must put out less than a certain % of oxides of nitrogen to meet emission standards. And the method they use: dilute the combustion air charge to the engine by mixing some of the exhaust gases back into the inlet system under certain conditions.
The result: combustion temperatures are reduced because the effective percentage of oxygen in the combustion 'air' is now less than the
'natural' level of about 21% - and a lower PERCENTAGE of oxides of nitrogen is present in the exhaust gas. BUT, I've never been able to reconcile the fact that EGR, by it's very nature, reduces the operating efficiency of the engine and therefore, the engine must use more fuel (and overall, produce more exhaust products!) to accomplish the same job!
It's always seemed to me to be a bit self-defeating. I mean, the manufacturers use turbo-charging, high-pressure, extremely finely atomised injection systems and precise electronic controls on injection timing and duration to get the maximum possible efficiency out of modern diesels - than slap on EGR to undermine their best efforts??
Getting a bit off-thread here - back to you question about the TD42Ti Nissan engine. From the horses mouth (Nissan technical bulletin):
"EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculation) has been adopted to the TD42Ti. EGR is added to improve emission performance, ie; lower the NOx emissions.
The EGR lowers engine combustion temperatures which has the added benefit of reducing the NOx emissions.
In the case of the TD42Ti part of the EGR piping is a water cooled unit."
and
"To assist in maintaining lower combustion temperatures, the exhaust gas that is recirculated back into the engine via the EGR system is further lowered in temperature by an EGR cooler." [and more unnecessary load on the cooling system??]
Now, far be it from me to suggest anyone remove such an important anti-emissions device, but that EGR cooler looks like it could be easily converted into a nice camping shower hot water heater...
One last point: should anyone remove the EGR system (for, say, off-road competition??), be aware that your full load combustion temperatures will rise, as will the maximum exhaust gas temperature [EGT] - simply because you are now burning your fuel in 'real' air."
Hope this helps. Perhaps I should elaborate on this as another "Turbo Talk" topic?
Ian
FollowupID:
399524