FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates induction heating structures and methods and has particular
but not exclusive application to catalytic converters, particulate filters (PFs) and
like structures for treating exhaust gases to reduce harmful pollution.
BACKGROUND
[0002] The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) and the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) have established U.S. federal rules that set national greenhouse gas
emission standards. Beginning with 2012 model year vehicles, automobile manufacturers
required that fleet-wide greenhouse gas emissions be reduced by approximately five
percent every year. Included in the requirements, for example, the new standards decreed
that new passenger cars, light-duty trucks, and medium-duty passenger vehicles had
to have an estimated combined average emissions level no greater than 250 grams of
carbon dioxide (CO
2) per mile in vehicle model year 2016.
[0003] Catalytic converters and DPFs are used in internal combustion engines to reduce noxious
exhaust emissions arising when fuel is burned as part of the combustion cycle. Significant
among such emissions are carbon monoxide and nitric oxide. These gases are dangerous
to health but can be converted to less noxious gases by oxidation respectively to
carbon dioxide and nitrogen/oxygen. Other noxious gaseous emission products, including
unburned hydrocarbons, can also be converted either by oxidation or reduction to less
noxious forms. The conversion processes can be effected or accelerated if they are
performed at high temperature and in the presence of a suitable catalyst being matched
to the particular noxious emission gas that is to be processed and converted to a
benign gaseous form. For example, typical catalysts for the conversion of carbon monoxide
to carbon dioxide are finely divided platinum and palladium, while a typical catalyst
for the conversion of nitric oxide to nitrogen and oxygen is finely divided rhodium.
[0004] Catalytic converters and PFs have low efficiency when cold, i.e. the running temperature
from ambient air start-up temperature to a temperature of the order typically of 300C
or "light-off' temperature, being the temperature where the metal catalyst starts
to accelerate the pollutant conversion processes previously described. Light-off is
often characterized as the temperature at which a 50% reduction in toxic emissions
occurs and for gasoline is approximately 300°C. Below light-off temperature, little
to no catalytic action takes place. This is therefore the period during a vehicle's
daily use during which most of the vehicle's polluting emissions are produced. Getting
the catalytic converter or PF hot as quickly as possible is important to reducing
cold start emissions.
[0005] Copending
US patent application 14452800 (Catalytic converter structures with induction heating) shows a catalytic converter
assembly having a substrate body with a plurality of cells for cell therethrough of
exhaust gases. Metal is located at predetermined locations in the substrate body and
an electromagnetic field generator is mounted adjacent the substrate body for generating
a varying electromagnetic field inductively to heat the metal and so heat the substrate
body.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0006] For simplicity and clarity of illustration, elements illustrated in the accompanying
figure are not drawn to common scale. For example, the dimensions of some of the elements
are exaggerated relative to other elements for clarity. Advantages, features and characteristics
of the present invention, as well as methods, operation and functions of related elements
of structure, and the combinations of parts and economies of manufacture, will become
apparent upon consideration of the following description and claims with reference
to the accompanying drawings, all of which form a part of the specification, wherein
like reference numerals designate corresponding parts in the various figures, and
wherein:
FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a prior art gaseous emissions treatment
unit.
FIG. 2 is a longitudinal sectional view of a gaseous emissions treatment unit adapted
for use in an embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the unit of FIG. 2.
FIG. 4 is a perspective sectional view of a part of a gaseous emissions treatment
unit according to an embodiment of the invention showing metal inserts located in
cells of a substrate body.
FIG. 5, 5A and 5B are respectively longitudinal sectional, cross-sectional and perspective
views of a gaseous emissions treatment unit according to another embodiment of the
invention, the unit adapted for front end heating.
FIG. 6, 6A and 6B are respectively longitudinal sectional, cross-sectional and perspective
views of a gaseous emissions treatment unit according to a further embodiment of the
invention, the unit also adapted for front end heating.
FIG. 6C is a longitudinal sectional of a gaseous emissions treatment unit according
to a further embodiment of the invention, the unit adapted for back end heating of
gas exiting an upstream brick.
FIG. 6D is a longitudinal sectional of a gaseous emissions treatment unit according
to yet embodiment of the invention, the unit adapted for front end heating.
FIG. 6E is a longitudinal sectional of a gaseous emissions treatment unit according
to yet another embodiment of the invention, the unit adapted for back end heating
of gas exiting an upstream brick.
FIG. 7 is a longitudinal sectional view of a gaseous emissions treatment assembly
according to another embodiment of the invention, a front gaseous emissions treatment
unit adapted for back end heating to heat a downstream gaseous emissions treatment
unit.
FIG. 7A is a longitudinal sectional view of a gaseous emissions treatment assembly
according to another embodiment of the invention having a front unit configured for
both inductive front end heating and back end heating thereby to heat a downstream
gaseous emissions treatment unit.
FIG. 7B is a longitudinal sectional view of a gaseous emissions treatment assembly
according to another embodiment of the invention having both inductive front end heating
and back end heating of an upstream unit, and inductive front end heating of a downstream
unit.
FIGs. 8A and 8B are end and perspective views respectively of an emissions treatment
unit according to a further embodiment of the invention, the unit having a separate
front end heater.
FIGs. 9A and 9B are end and perspective views respectively of an emissions treatment
unit according to an embodiment of the invention, the unit having an alternative form
of separate front end heater.
FIGs. 10A and 10B are end and perspective views respectively of an emissions treatment
unit according to an embodiment of the invention, the unit of having a further alternative
form of separate front end heater.
FIGs. 11A and 11B are end and perspective views respectively of an emissions treatment
according to an embodiment of the invention, the unit of having yet another alternative
form of separate front end heater.
FIGs. 12A and 12B are end and perspective views respectively of an emissions treatment
unit according to an embodiment of the invention, the unit having a further alternative
form of separate front end heater.
FIGs. 13A and 13B are end and perspective views respectively of a gaseous emissions
treatment unit according to an embodiment of the invention, the unit having another
alternative form of separate front end heater.
FIG. 14 is a side sectional view of a space heater according to an embodiment of the
invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION INCLUDING THE PRESENTLY PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0007] A gaseous emissions treatment assembly may take any of a number of forms. Typical
of these is a known catalytic converter having a cylindrical substrate body 10 usually
made of ceramic material and often called a brick, an example of which is shown in
FIG. 1. The brick has a honeycomb structure in which a number of small area passages
or cells 12 extend the length of the brick, the cells being separated by walls 14.
There are typically from 400 to 900 cells per square inch (cpsi) of cross-sectional
area of the substrate body 10 and the walls are typically in the range 0.003 to 0.008
inches in thickness. Typically, the ceramic substrate body 10 is formed in an extrusion
process in which green ceramic material is extruded through an appropriately shaped
die and units are cut successively from the extrusion, the units being then cut into
bricks. The areal shape of the cells or passages 12 may be whatever is convenient
for contributing to the overall strength of the substrate body 10 while presenting
a large contact area at which flowing exhaust gases can interact with a hot catalyst
coating the interior walls of the cells. In other gaseous emissions treatment such
as particulate filters, there may or may not be catalyst coating on the passage walls.
In particulate filters, a checkerboard subset of cells have their front ends plugged,
a 'reverse' checkerboard subset of cells have their back ends plugged, and gaseous
emissions are treated by being driven though porous walls of the honeycomb structure
from cells of the first subset into cells of the reverse subset.
[0008] In the catalytic converter, interiors of the tubular cells 12 are wash-coated with
a layer containing a particular catalyst material. A wash-coat typically contains
a base material, suitable for ensuring adherence to the cured ceramic material of
the substrate body, and entrained particulate catalyst material for promoting specific
pollution-reducing chemical reactions. Examples of such catalyst materials are platinum
and palladium which are catalysts effective in converting carbon monoxide and oxygen
to carbon dioxide, and rhodium which is a catalyst suitable for converting nitric
oxide to nitrogen and oxygen. Other catalysts are known which promote high temperature
oxidation or reduction of other gaseous materials. The wash-coating is prepared by
generating a suspension of the finely divided catalyst in a ceramic paste or slurry,
the ceramic slurry serving to cause the wash-coat layer to adhere to the walls of
the ceramic substrate body. As an alternative to wash-coating to place catalyst materials
on the substrate body surfaces, the substrate body material itself may contain a catalyst
so that brick walls themselves present catalyst material at the internal surfaces
bounding the cells.
[0009] Exhaust gases from diesel (compression combustion) engines contain more nitrogen
oxides than gasoline (spark combustion) engines. Long-term exposure to nitrogen oxides
even at low levels can cause temporary or permanent respiratory problems. Selective
catalytic reduction (SCR) is a method by which a liquid reductant is injected into
a diesel engine exhaust flow to combine with nitrogen dioxide and nitric oxide (referred
to collectively as NO
X) in the exhaust gas. A preferred reductant is aqueous urea (2(NH
2)
2CO which is often referred to as diesel exhaust fluid (DEF). In the presence of a
catalyst, ammonia resulting from thermal decomposition of the urea combines with the
nitrogen oxides to produce less harmful products, chiefly nitrogen and water. Other
reductants such as anhydrous ammonia and aqueous ammonia may also be used as an alternative
to urea although especially for automotive application, on-board storage presents
greater difficulty. Suitable catalysts may be any of certain metals oxides (such as
those of molybdenum, vanadium, and tungsten), certain precious metals and zeolites.
The typical temperature range for a SCR reaction is from 360°C to 450° C with a catalyst
such as activated carbon being used to stimulate lower temperature reactions. As in
gasoline (spark combustion engines), diesel (pressure combustion) engines may experience
a period after a start-up where the exhaust temperature is too cool for effective
SCR NO
x reduction processes to take place. Other catalytic converters in which the present
invention finds application for preheating or supplementary heating are lean NOX catalyst
systems, lean NOX trap systems and non-selective catalytic reduction systems. The
present invention is applicable also to each of these nitrogen oxide emissions treatment
assemblies.
[0010] A gaseous emissions treatment assembly may have a series of the substrate bodies
or bricks 10, each having a particular catalyst layer or emissions treatment mode
depending on the noxious emission to be reduced or neutralized. Gaseous emissions
treatment bricks may be made of materials other than fired ceramic, such as stainless
steel. Also, they may have different forms of honeycombed cells or passages than those
described above. For example, cells can be round, square, hexagonal, triangular or
other convenient cross-sectional shape. In addition, if desired for optimizing strength
and low thermal capacity or for other purposes, some of the extruded honeycomb walls
can be formed so as to be thicker than other of the walls or formed so that there
is some variety in the shape and size of cells. Junctions between adjacent interior
cell walls can be sharp angled or can present curved profiles.
[0011] Typically, as shown in FIG. 1, the wash-coated ceramic honeycomb brick 10 is wrapped
in a ceramic fibrous expansion blanket 16. A stamped metal casing or can 18 transitions
between the parts of an exhaust pipe (not shown) fore and aft of the gaseous emissions
treatment unit so as to encompass the blanket wrapped brick. The casing 18 is typically
made up of two parts which are welded to seal the brick in place. The expansion blanket
16 provides a buffer between the casing 18 and the brick 10 to accommodate their dissimilar
thermal expansion coefficients. The metal of the sheet metal casing 18 expands much
more than the ceramic material of the brick at a given temperature increase and, if
the two materials were bonded together or in direct contact with each other, destructive
stresses would be experienced at the interface of the two materials. The blanket 16
also dampens vibrations from the exhaust system that might otherwise damage the brittle
ceramic of the substrate body 10.
[0012] In use, the encased brick (or bricks) is mounted in the vehicle exhaust line to receive
exhaust gases from the engine and to pass them to the vehicle tail pipe. The passage
of exhaust gases through the gaseous emissions treatment unit heats the ceramic brick
10 to promote catalyst activated processes where the flowing gases contact the catalyst
layer. Especially when the vehicle engine is being run at optimal operating temperature
and when there is substantial throughput of exhaust gases, such treatment units operate
substantially to reduce the presence of noxious gaseous emissions entering the atmosphere.
Such units have shortcomings however at start-up when the interior of the brick is
at low temperature, during idling during city driving or when waiting for a coffee
at a Tim Hortons drive-through, and between electric driving periods for hybrid vehicles.
[0013] Brick shape, profile and cell densities vary among different manufacturers. For example,
some bricks are round and some are oval. Some assemblies have single stage bricks
that are generally heavily wash-coated with the catalyst metals, while others may
have two or three bricks with different wash-coatings on each brick. Some exhausts
have 900, 600 and 400 cpsi cell densities used in the full exhaust assembly, while
others use only 400 cpsi bricks throughout. A close-coupled converter may be mounted
up close to the exhaust manifold with a view to reducing the period between start-up
and light-off temperature. An underfloor converter can be located further from the
engine where it will take relatively longer to heat up but be relatively larger and
used to treat the majority of gases once the exhaust assembly is up to temperature.
In another configuration, a unit for reducing the period to light-off temperature
and a unit to deal with high gas flow after light-off are mounted together in a common
casing.
[0014] At one or more locations in the assembly, sensors mounted in the exhaust gas flow
including within or adjacent the substrate body provide feedback to the engine control
system for emission checking and tuning purposes. Aside from start-up, control of
fuel and air input has the object typically of maintaining a 14.6:1 air: fuel ratio
for an optimal combination of power and cleanliness. A ratio higher than this produces
a lean condition - not enough fuel. A lower ratio produces a rich condition - too
much fuel. The start-up procedure on some vehicles runs rich for an initial few seconds
to get heat into the engine and ultimately the catalytic converter. The structures
and operating methods described below for indirectly heating the catalyst layers and
the exhaust gases can be used with each of a close-coupled catalytic converter, an
underfloor converter, and a combination of the two. Outputs from the temperature sensors
are taken to a controller at which the monitored temperature or temperatures are used
to control when induction heating is switched on and off. Using an appropriate algorithm
implemented at the controller, the monitored temperatures may also be used to control
specific effects of the applied heating processes to achieve a particular heating
pattern.
[0015] As disclosed in
U.S. Patent No. 9488085, a gaseous emissions treatment assembly such as that shown in FIG. 1 is modified
as shown in FIGs. 2 and 3 to enable induction heating. Induction heating is a process
in which a metal body is heated by applying a varying electromagnetic field so as
to change the magnetic field to which the metal body is subject. This, in turn, induces
eddy currents within the body, thereby causing resistive heating of the body. In the
case of a ferromagnetic metal body, heat is also generated by a hysteresis effect.
When the non-magnetized ferromagnetic metal is placed into a magnetic field, the metal
becomes magnetized with the creation of magnetic domains having opposite poles. The
varying field periodically initiates pole reversal in the magnetic domains, the reversals
in response to high frequency induction field variation on the order of 1,000s to
1,000,000s cycles per second (Hz) depending on the material, mass, and shape of the
ferromagnetic metal body. Magnetic domain polarity is not easily reversed and the
resistance to reversal causes further heat generation in the metal.
[0016] As illustrated in FIGs. 2 and 3, surrounding the ceramic substrate body 10 is a metal
coil 20 and, although not visible in FIG. 2, located within selected ones of the cells
12 are metal pins, rods, wires or other metal inserts 22 (FIG. 4). By generating a
varying electromagnetic field at the coil 20, a chain reaction is initiated, the end
result of which is that after start-up of a vehicle equipped with an exhaust system
embodying the invention, light-off temperature may be attained more quickly in the
presence of the varying electromagnetic induction field than if there were no such
field. The chain reaction is as follows: the varying electromagnetic field induces
eddy currents in the metal elements 22; the eddy currents cause heating of the metal
elements; heat from the metal elements 22 is transferred to the ceramic substrate
body 10; heat from the heated substrate body 10 is transferred to exhaust gas as it
passes through the emissions control unit; and the heated exhaust gas causes catalytic
reactions to take place more quickly at the walls 14 compared to unheated exhaust
gas. Conduction from the heated wires, pins or other filling elements 22 is the primary
source of heat transfer to the ceramic substrate 10 and therefore to the exhaust gases
when the emissions unit is in operation. There is also a small amount of convective
and radiated heat transfer at any small air gaps between a wire and the interior surface
of the cell within which it is contained.
[0017] The coil 20 is a wound length of copper tube, although other materials such as copper
wire or litz wire may be used. Copper tube is preferred because it offers high surface
area in terms of other dimensions of the coil; induction being a skin-effect phenomenon,
high surface area is of advantage in generating the varying field. If litz wire or
copper wire is used, an enamel or other coating on the wire is configured not to burn
off during sustained high temperature operation of the converter. An air gap between
the coil 20 and the nearest inductance metal wires 22 prevents significant heat transfer
from the wires 22 to the coil 10 which would otherwise increase the coil resistivity
and so lower its efficiency.
[0018] A layer 24 of electromagnetic field shielding / concentrating material is located
immediately outside the coil 20 to provide induction shielding and to reduce induction
loss to the metal converter housing. The layer 24 also acts to increase inductive
coupling to the metal in the substrate body 10 to focus heating. The shield / concentrator
24 can be made from a ferrite or other high-permeability, low-power-loss materials
such as Giron, MagnetShield, Papershield, Finemet, CobalTex, or other magnetic shielding
material that can be arranged to surround some or all of the windings of the coil
20. In particular, the magnetic shield 24 operates as a magnetic flux concentrator,
flux intensifier, diverter, or flux controller to contain the magnetic fields within
the substrate body. The magnetic shield lowers loss by mitigating undesirable heating
of adjacent conductive materials. Without the magnetic shield / concentrator 24, magnetic
flux produced by the coil 20 could spread around the coil 20 and link with the electrically
conductive surroundings such as the metal casing 18 and other surrounding metal in
an exhaust system, and/or other components of an internal combustion engine, vehicle,
generator or other electrical system or host system, decreasing the life of these
components and increasing energy loss. In addition, the layer 24 operates to direct
or concentrate the magnetic field to the substrate body 10 providing selective or
enhanced heating of a desired region of the substrate body 10, for example, by redirecting
magnetic flux that would otherwise travel away from that desired region. In particular,
the layer 24 operates to concentrate the magnetic flux produced by the coil 20 in
the direction of the metal wires or rods 22 in the substrate body 10 for more efficient
heating. As an additional benefit, the magnetic shield can improve the electrical
efficiency of the induction coil 20 by increasing power transfer.
[0019] The coil is contained in a fiber insulation sheath 26 with the sheathed coil being
encased in a in cast, cured insulation. The sheath functions both to stabilize the
coil position and to create an airtight seal to confine passage of the exhaust gases
through the ceramic honeycomb substrate body 10 where catalytic action takes place.
The insulation also provides a barrier to prevent the induction coil 20 from shorting
on the converter can 18 or the ferrite shield 24. The insulation is suitably alumino-silicate
mastic. Alternatively, the substrate body can be wrapped in an alumino-silicate fiber
paper. In one manufacturing method, the copper coil 20 is wrapped around the substrate
body and then placed in the casing or can 18. In an alternative manufacturing method,
the coil 20 is placed in the can or casing 18 and the substrate body 10 is inserted
into the coil / can assembly.
[0020] A varying electromagnetic induction field is generated at the coil by applying power
from either a DC or AC source. Conventional automobiles have 12 VDC electrical systems.
The induction system can operate on either DC or AC power supply. The induction signal
produced can also be either DC or AC driven. For either DC or AC, this produces a
frequency of 1 to 200 kHz, a RMS voltage of 130 to 200V and amperage of 5 to 8A using
1kw of power as an example. In one example suitable for road vehicles, a DC to DC
bus converts the vehicle's 12 VDC battery power to the required DC voltage outlined
above. In another example suitable for conventional road vehicles, a DC to AC inverter
converts the vehicle's 12V DC battery power to the desired AC voltage outlined above.
Another example is more suited to hybrid vehicles having both internal combustion
engines and electric motors have on-board batteries rated in the order of 360V voltage
and 50kW power. In this case, the battery supply power is higher, but the same basic
DC to DC bus or DC to AC inverter electrical configuration can be applied. An insulated
gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) or metal-oxide-semiconductor field effect transistor
(MOSFET) high speed switch is used to change the direction of electrical flow through
the coil. In terms of the effect of a varying electromagnetic induction field on metal
in the ceramic substrate body, a low switching frequency produces a longer waveform
providing good field penetration below the surface of the metal element and therefore
relatively uniform heating. However, this is at the sacrifice of high temperature
and rapid heating owing to the lack of switching. In contrast, a high switching frequency
produces a shorter waveform, which generates higher surface temperature at the sacrifice
of penetration depth. Applied power is limited to avoid the risk of melting the metal
elements or having them reach Curie point. A suitable power input to a single brick
coil is of the order of 1.1kw.
[0021] As previously described, inserts 22 such as wires, pins or other filling made of
ferromagnetic or other metal are located at selected locations of the ceramic substrate
body 10 as shown in the detail view of FIG. 4. In the case of wires, they may be fixed
in place by a friction fit at least partially achieved by closely matching the wire
exterior area dimensions to the cell area dimensions so that surface roughness of
the wire surface and the cell walls 14 holds the wires 22 in place. Additionally,
a wire can be formed with a resiliently flexible element (not shown) which is flexed
from a rest condition as the wire is inserted into a cell so that a part of the wire
bears against an interior wall of the cell 12 and so provides frictional retention.
The overall friction fit can be such as to resist gravity, vibration, temperature
cycling, and pressure on the wires as exhaust gases pass through the substrate body.
[0022] Wires 22 may alternatively, or in addition, be fixed into the cells by bonding outer
surfaces of the wires to interior surfaces of the cell walls 14. A suitable composite
adhesive may be a blend of materials chosen to reduce temperature cycling stress effects
in which there may be significant metal wire expansion / contraction, but vanishingly
small expansion / contraction of the ceramic substrate. This differential can produce
stresses at the adhesive interface between the two materials. By using such a composite
adhesive, movement of a bonded wire relative to the surrounding cell walls may be
reduced while maintaining high heat transfer. Metal inserts may alternatively be introduced
into selected cells as molten metal, metal slugs or metal power which is then treated
to render the inserted material in such a state and relationship with the walls of
the substrate as to retain metal in the selected cells.
[0023] Field produced by the electromagnetic induction coil can be tuned to the metal wire
load to achieve high efficiency in terms of generating heat and reduced time to light-off
temperature. Heating effects can be modified by appropriate selection of any or all
of (a) the electrical input waveform to the coil 20, (b) nature and position of passive
flux control elements such as the shield / concentrator 24, and (c) nature, position,
and configuration of the coil 20. In addition, the applied field can be changed with
time so that there is interdependence between the induction field / heating pattern
and the particular operational phase; for example, pre-start-up, warm-up, highway
driving, idling and for hybrids, intermittent change over from internal combustion
to electric drive. In an alternative configuration, more than one coil can be used
to obtain desired induction effects. For example, a substrate body having an annular
cross-section can have one energizing coil at the substrate perimeter and a second
energizing coil at the substrate core (not shown).
[0024] The heating pattern can be determined by appropriate location and configuration of
the metal pins or wires 22. A suitable metal for the inserted wire is a ferromagnetic
metal such as stainless steel grade 430 which has high magnetic permeability and corrosion
resistance. Lower permeability alloys such as 300 or 400 series stainless steels may
also be used. Alternative metals can be used depending on particular properties required
in making the wire inserts and in fixing inserts within selected cells of the ceramic
substrate. Such properties include metal formability, ductility, softness and elasticity.
For shaping the direction and strength of magnetic flux in the substrate, lower magnetic
permeability metals or alloys may be used for metal inserts in the outer cells with
relatively higher magnetic permeability metals being used for metal inserts in the
inner cells. Metals having very high magnetic permeability may also be used. For example,
Kanthal iron-chrome-aluminum alloys used in wires manufactured by Sandvik have a relative
permeability of 9000 and greater. High relative permeability can be achieved using
wires made of other alloys including nickel-iron and iron-cobalt alloys.
[0025] It is desirable to have intense rapid heating of a substrate so that the whole substrate
reaches light-off temperature rapidly. Minimizing the period to light-off is important
to overall emissions reduction because there is virtually no catalyst promoted treatment
of gaseous emissions below this temperature. For a given applied power level, low
pin density results in hot regions at pin sites but cold regions between them. Although
pin sites may achieve light-off temperature relatively quickly, the fraction of the
ceramic substrate cross-sectional area at or above light-off temperature may not be
high enough to induce and maintain overall light-off temperature. Exhaust gas flowing
through the narrow substrate passages is at approximately the same temperature as
that of the local ceramic, so gas passing through cold passages is untreated.
[0026] Although in current commercial use, a substrate such as substrate 10, may typically
have a length of from 3 to 6 inches, if an upstream section of the substrate 2 inches
or even less in length is at light-off temperature over its full extent, then emissions
gas passing through that part of the substrate will quickly drive downstream catalyst
coated areas to light-off temperature. Catalytic reactions that take place at and
above the light-off temperature are generally exothermic so that after light-off is
achieved upstream, a self-fuelling cascade effect is produced at the downstream part
of the substrate. Consequently, although an inductively heated front section may be
narrow compared with that part of the substrate that is not inductively heated, sufficient
mass flow and heat may exist to drive the rest of the substrate rapidly to light-off
temperature. The exothermic catalyst promoted burning of unburned components in the
exhaust gas develops downstream into a chain reaction after the small upstream substrate
section reaches light-off.
[0027] Rapid heating to light-off temperature can be achieved by using high pin density
with pin heating sites located close together so that the light-off temperature is
attained across the full cross section of the substrate. However, increased density
of packing of metal inserts 22 into the passages 12 increases pressure drop through
the system and so limits how much of the cross-sectional area of the ceramic substrate
10 can be blocked with metal inserts 22. This, in turn, limits how much of the cross-sectional
area of the substrate will reach light-off temperature during operation. Pressure
drop over the length of an emissions treatment assembly is related to the amount of
work required for an engine to drive its gaseous emissions through the assembly. The
more work the engine most do to deal with emissions treatment, the less efficient
it is in terms of turning burning of fuel into driving the vehicle. Pressure drop
for an assembly such as that with which the present invention is concerned originates
from three sources: frictional losses, impingement losses, and expansion losses. Frictional
losses are due to exhaust flow along the narrow cells of the substrate. Impingement
losses are due to the blocking cross-sectional area that the exhaust flow encounters
at the face of the substrate, this including the end walls of the cells and any cells
that are occluded by metal inserts. Expansion losses are due to transition in flow
as emissions gases exit the ceramic substrate at high velocity, with the gas from
discrete channels expanding into a slower flowing mass. While the diameter of the
substrate can be increased to compensate for additional pressure drop caused by the
presence of more pins, this requires a bigger unit and higher materials cost.
[0028] In a substrate such as that shown in FIG. 1, pressure drop from frictional losses
has an approximately linear relationship with length and accounts for about 90% of
total pressure drop in for example, a unit having a 3 inch (0.0762 metres) ceramic
substrate, a cpsi (cells per square inch) between 400 and 900 and an exhaust gas flow
rate of 5 metres /second. If, as shown in FIG. 4, selected passages are stacked with
pins at a packing density of 1:x, the pressure drop increases by about (100/x)%, a
cell 12 being considered blocked by a pin 22 regardless of pin length.
[0029] Given a substrate of length 'L' and pin density '1:x' resulting in a certain pressure
drop P, the pressure drop P remains approximately the same if one part of the substrate
of length 'L/2' has a pin density of 1:x/2 and the remaining part of the substrate
of length 'L/2' has open unblocked cells. This relationship extends beyond the above
example, with the pressure drop again being substantially unchanged for a first substrate
part of length 'L/3' and pin density '1:x/3' and the remaining part of the substrate
of length '2L/3' having open unblocked cells. With such arrangements, however, while
the pressure drop remains relatively constant, more heating sites are present. This
means that, depending on other requirements of the system, pin density and relative
length of the heated part of the substrate can be adjusted without significantly affecting
the pressure drop though the system. In particular, a smaller volume of substrate
can be inductively heated in order to attain light-off temperature more quickly than
if the whole substrate were subjected to the same power input.
[0030] In one embodiment of the invention as shown in FIG. 5, 5A and 5B, placement of pins
22 and their inductive heating by coil 22 is limited to a front part of the substrate
where the exhaust gas enters. The front part 28 of the substrate 10 has a high pin
stacking density and the passages 12 in the rear part 30 of the substrate are open
and unblocked. For practicality in terms of operation, the length relationship between
the front and rear parts 28, 30 and the pin stacking density of the front part 28
depends at least partly on whether the heating characteristics and the resulting pressure
drop are operationally acceptable.
[0031] In the illustrated embodiment of FIGs 4 and 5, metal inserts 22 occupy a regular
array of 1 in 9 passages at the front part 28 of the substrate 10 with occupied passage
lengths to the rear of the pins 22 being open. Also in this embodiment, the front
part has a maximum pin length which is 50% of the length of the rear part or 33% of
the overall substrate length. The pins 22 in the front part of the substrate are distributed
with their trailing ends in a D or parabola shape. Magnetic flux from the surrounding
coil 20 is strongest closest to the coil 22 and weakens further away from it. The
D-shaped wire array distributes the magnetic flux well and also compensates for inductive
energization being a "line of sight" process whereby wires 22 near the interior of
the substrate 10 may be in the shadow of energized wires nearer the coil 20. Depending
on system demands including heating and emissions treatment requirements and structural
features such as cells per square inch and actual length of the brick, the passages
22 at the front of the brick can be packed at more or less than 1:9. A packing range
of from 1:4 to 1:16, has been found particularly advantageous from the viewpoint of
acceptable pressure drop while achieving high intensity heating. In such a range,
gaseous emissions can pass through the brick without unacceptable pressure drop through
the system. In such a configuration, the pins 22 must provide sufficient metal per
unit volume to achieve a desired heating profile in the heated front 28 without damaging
the pin material. The parabola or D stacking of pins can be longitudinally reversed
although the configuration shown is preferred for ease of placing the metal inserts
during manufacture. In one example of D stacking of pins, a 50 mm substrate slice
in which generally uniform output temperature across the substrate was obtained, the
shortest pin used was 9 mm. in length (at the outside of the heater slice) and the
longest pin length was 50 mm (at the centerline).
[0032] The length of the front part compared to the total length of the substrate can be
less than 33% provided the front part of the substrate is large enough to accommodate
the desired level of pin packing given that there is a lower limit to pin length for
increasing heating intensity. The induction system requires substantial load (in this
case, mass of pin material) to absorb the magnetic flux. Too little mass can lead
to overheating and melting of the pins and the loss of electrical to thermal efficiency
if the pin material reaches its Curie point. At that temperature, electromagnetic
characteristics of the pin material deteriorate. Also with large power applied to
a small load, the power supply may overheat and fail. In the rear part 30 of the substrate
10, the passages 22 should have enough catalyst coated surface (or particulate filter
surface in the case of particulate filters) effectively to treat the emissions gases
passing through the system.
[0033] Concentrating heating at the front 28 of the substrate increases the heat that each
wire generates for a given pin array pattern and input power and so increases localized
heating. However, an issue with the structure is that ceramic of substrate 10 conducts
heat away in all directions during the heating cycle. This effectively increases the
total volume of the ceramic that the heat occupies and therefore reduces the intensity
over the volume of the pin occupied sites for a particular power input.
[0034] In another embodiment of the invention as illustrated in FIGs. 6, 6A and 6B, the
assembly has a front substrate 32 or 'slice' that is separate from a rear substrate
34. The two substrates are mounted in line with a selected subset of the cells or
passages of the slice substrate 32 occupied by metal inserts 22 such as wires, pins
or other forms of metal filling to enable inductive heating, and with the cells or
passages 22 of the rear brick 34 being open. In the illustrated embodiment, the slice
substrate 32, in terms of the direction 36 of flow of emissions gas to be treated,
is substantially shorter than the rear brick 34. The slice length can be from 2% to
50% of the length of the rear substrate although the practical suitability of any
particular percentage choice depends on the length to diameter ratio of the rear substrate.
Although the front slice substrate 32 has an important function as a heater, walls
of the front brick passages 22 can be coated with emissions treatment catalyst so
that the slice substrate 32 is operable both to heat and treat emissions gas before
it passes from the front brick 32 across a gap 38 into the rear brick 34 to be treated
in a further catalyst-promoted reaction.
[0035] In this embodiment, pressure drop impact is reduced by having the inductively heated
front unit 32 separate from the downstream unit 34 with the downstream unit being
heated by the passage of hot gas from the front unit. The pin packing density and
so the number of heating sites per unit cross-sectional area of the unit 32 is significantly
increased so as to attain hot regions at the pins 22 and relatively hot regions between
the closely spaced pins. The result is a relatively uniform temperature reached across
the full cross section of the slice 32 sufficient for light-off temperature to be
attained quickly. The bricks 32 and 34 are separated by a distance of the order of
2 to 6 mm. At this separation, gaseous emissions passing along the slice substrate
32 with a typical flow velocity of from less than 0.5 metres per second to greater
than 5 metres per second readily adapt from flow in the front brick 32 to flow in
the rear brick 34 without materially increasing pressure drop. If separation is less
than 2 mm, pressure drop is higher because of a wake effect as the flow exits the
inductively heated substrate. This is caused by the flow from the cells of the induction
heated unit spreading into the void behind a blocked cell that contains the heating
element. The 2 to 6 mm is representative of the general distances that it takes for
the wake effect to partially or fully subside depending on the cell density of the
substrate and the associated pin array density. A high cpsi substrate with a low pin
array density gives the shortest wake effect corresponding to the smallest required
separation distance. A separation distance below 2 mm leads to a higher pressure drop
as wake effect is at its highest intensity. Here, the flow spreads out through fewer
cells which translates into the second substrate if the wake effect is not allowed
to subside. With low separation distance, the rear substrate acts as if it has a blocked
cell with little to no airflow through the associated channel if that open cell is
aligned too closely with a blocked cell of the front substrate. This analysis assumes
that the front and rear substrates are perfectly aligned. Misalignment of the substrates
gives rise to an even greater pressure drop from small separation distances. If the
separation is greater than 6 mm there is not the disadvantage of the wake effect but
packaging inevitably increases in size. A large gap may also allow insulation from
the fibrous mats to bulge into the space and become influenced by the exhaust flow,
either by reducing the opening diameter or leading to the onset of insulation degradation.
Normally in a commercial inductively heated assembly without a front end slice heater,
the MFC is shorter than the inductively heated substrate to allow for application
of an insulation layer and canning by means of collapsed down sheet metal. An advantage
of a small gap between the substrates is that the MFC can be made longer than normal
so that it overlaps the rear (non-heater) substrate which results in an increase in
electromagnetic efficiency of the heater unit. Insulation at the gap acts to protect
the MFC by supporting it both sides of the gap.
[0036] The orientation of a front slice substrate 32 relative to the rear brick 34 is adjusted
during assembly by an optical alignment process to reduce the area of wall end-to-wall
end incidence; i.e., to increase the area of passage-to-passage incidence. To maintain
the linear spacing, the bricks are held in alignment by a common jacket arrangement
(not shown) similar to the jacket arrangement shown in FIGs. 2 and 3 or by any other
suitable mounting. In a preferred embodiment, opposed faces 40 of the front and rear
bricks 32, 34 are flat and perpendicular to the longitudinal axes of the bricks. However,
the gap between the bricks 32 and 34 can be alternatively shaped, for example, generally
to follow the dome / parabola shaped distribution of the pin trailing ends (FIG. 6E).
[0037] In another embodiment of the invention as shown in FIG. 6C, a heating slice substrate
is mounted downstream of an emissions treatment brick. In this way, gas exiting the
upstream brick 33 is given an inductive heating boost before passing further down
the exhaust line to a subsequent emissions treatment brick.
[0038] The decoupled design of FIG. 6 has merit in terms of product integrity. Among materials
frequently used for making substrates are low-expansion, honeycomb ceramics such as
cordierite and silicon carbide. These materials are highly thermally insulating but
are not zero-expansion materials so a temperature gradient can cause stresses to develop.
Ideally, gradients are low enough that stresses do not accumulate sufficiently to
cause a defect or substrate failure. However, as applied induction power levels increase
in conjunction with heating applied over smaller areas / volumes, temperature gradients
within the ceramic will correspondingly increase, heightening the risk of defects
and failure. For the single substrate example of FIG. 5, temperature gradients are
extreme because regions of the ceramic that are being heated are physically linked
to cold regions having no heating. Hot regions can, for example, be 700°C or greater
while cold regions may be below 0°C, this variation being over a very short distance
of the ceramic. A design with intense heating only at the front face and the rear
kept cold is more prone to fail by popping of the front portion of the ceramic from
the main body. The decoupled brick embodiment of FIG. 6 is characterized by a lower
temperature gradient. The small volume of the front brick 32 allows even the brick
extremities that are not directly heated to rise in temperature through conduction.
This avoids the extreme 700°C to 0°C gradient presented above. Instead, 700°C may
be the maximum temperature but a minimum temperature of the order of 350°C may prevail.
Such a temperature gradient over a distance of about 3.5 centimetres (1.375 inches)
is more manageable and configurable into commercial designs. Additionally, because
of the absence of substrate material at the gap 38, heat is not lost by conduction
towards the back of the assembly. This in turn means that generated heat that might
otherwise be conducted away is retained in a smaller front volume to increase heating
efficiency and speed.
[0039] A feature of the front-end heater with its high metal content to focus heating in
a small volume at the front of a unit is that relatively densely packed metal acts
to concentrate the field from the surrounding coil 20 to increase heating and, as
a corollary acts to reduce undesirable field effects at the casing 18 (FIGs. 2, and
3).
[0040] Following are three examples of a front end heater slice configuration showing related
structural properties and performance characteristics:
Example 1
[0041]
- a) Length of slice: 50mm of cordierite substrate
- b) Cpsi: 600
- c) Length of longest pin - 50mm / shortest pin - 9mm
- d) Weight of metal in slice: 221 grams
- e) Applied power: 10kW draw
- f) Time to light-off temperature (including the actual temperature) 8 seconds to 300
degrees C
- g) Pin and overall slice temperature: 681°C pin temp with slice temperature locally
being much the same
[0042] In this example, the magnetic flux concentrator is relatively thick to handle high
power and the coil is relatively large to handle high voltage.
Example 2
[0043]
- a) Length of slice: 50mm cordierite
- b) Cpsi: 600
- c) Length of longest pin: 50mm / shortest pin: 9mm
- d) Weight of metal in slice: 221 grams
- e) Applied power: 2kW draw
- f) Time to light-off temperature: 26 seconds to 300 degrees C
- g) Pin and overall slice temperature (presumably high but not over melt or Curie)?
450C pin temp with slice temp locally being the same
[0044] In this example, the magnetic flux concentrator is relatively thin because of the
relatively low power and the coil is relatively small because the voltage is lower.
Example 3
[0045]
- a) Length of slice: 25 mm cordierite
- b) Cpsi: 600
- c) Length of longest pin 25 mm / shortest pin 6 mm
- d) Weight of metal in slice: 111 grams
- e) Applied power: 2kW draw
- f) Time to light-off temperature: 16 seconds to 300 degrees C
- g) Pin and overall slice temperature 692C pin temp with slice temp locally being the
same.
[0046] In this example, the magnetic flux concentrator is relatively thin because of the
relatively low power and the coil is relatively short because the slice is thinner.
[0047] In another embodiment of the invention as shown in FIG. 6D, the passages 12 of the
heating slice substrate 32 are made only long enough as is required to provide necessary
structural support for the pins 22. For example, the pins 22 can project forwardly
from the front face 42 of the brick and / or can project rearwardly from the back
face 44 of the brick. Consequently, certain parts of the pins 22 may be separated
from adjacent pins by air instead of insulating ceramic which may increase conduction
within the heating volume. In another embodiment of the invention, occupation of the
slice passages by the wires or pins is in other than a D or parabola shape. For example,
some or all of the pins can be of uniform length or some other configurations can
be used to obtain desired heat profiles of exiting exhaust gas across the area of
the slice.
[0048] The decoupled or slice configuration has further merit in relation to complex washcoated
catalyst arrangements of the sort where the gaseous emissions are subjected to two
or more different treatments. Application of catalyst washcoat is generally done by
taking a bare substrate and dipping it into slurry that contains the catalyst metals
and a porous ceramic carrier. Capillary action within the porous substrate wicks the
water/liquid from the slurry and this deposits the precious metal and ceramic material
on passage surfaces. Residence time during dipping and the number of dip cycles can
be varied to produce thick washcoats which are desirable for maximum emissions treatment.
A vacuum system is used to suck away excess liquid and then the washcoated substrate
is heated to cure the washcoat onto the cell walls. Sometimes, two different washcoats
are needed in a catalyst assembly; for example, when multiple emissions gases are
being treated in a single system with each emissions gas requiring its own washcoat
chemistry. Applying two different washcoats is challenging for a single substrate
because in current commercial production processes, one washcoat is applied to one
end of the substrate and a different washcoat is applied to the other end of the substrate.
Submersion depth during dipping is difficult to control and generally a clean transition
between two washcoats is not achieved. The washcoats inherently narrow the open area
of the cells but there is frequently also taper to the washcoat thickness. Vacuum
removal to leave a consistent thickness of washcoat material during coating is easier
to achieve at substrate ends than at the middle of the substrate. The FIG. 6 heating
slice design makes the dual washcoat process easier and generally gives better quality
results.
[0049] In manufacturing substrate material, there are several different commercially available
cpsi substrates to choose from, these typically including 400, 600, and 900 cpsi structures
although higher cpsi substrates have been achieved. These substrates are also available
with different wall thicknesses for a given cpsi. Also, substrates are available made
from one of several different ceramic materials. There may be the need to optimize
the performance or cost of a catalyst assembly. For example, a design could be optimized
by using relatively costly 900 cpsi, thin wall (low mass), silicon carbide as the
material of the front substrate and low cost, 400 cpsi, thick wall, cordierite substrate
as the material of the back substrate. This is virtually impossible for a single substrate
design because the cross-section form of a single substrate is fixed. Extrusion processes
for manufacturing substrate material do not have the flexibility to allow a change
in cpsi, wall thickness and/or material composition in the middle of extrusion. The
slice embodiment of FIGs. 6, 6A and 6B allow for several possible combinations of
substrate material properties to be included in the catalyst assembly for optimization
of performance and cost.
[0050] Although in the FIG. 6, 6A and 6B slice embodiment, the front brick 32 has catalyst
coated passages 12, the passages may alternatively be devoid of catalyst, meaning
that the brick serves solely as a pre-heater to heat emissions gases passing along
its passages before crossing the gap 38 to the rear unit 34. Such a configuration
allows optimization for heating in the way of size and profile of passages 12 and
position, size and profile of metal inserts 22. In the previously described embodiments,
the distribution of inductance metal elements relative to the positions of the cells
is configured so that heating is generally uniform and rapid across a thin front substrate
section or a separate substrate body. Localization of heating in an upstream pre-heater
may be enhanced by using differently sized and or/shaped cells and differently sized,
shaped and/or composition wires.
[0051] The front end induction slice heater design creates a rapid inferno of heat providing
very fast period to light-off and rapid attainment of high temperature of the catalyst
without requiring engine exhaust flow. Extreme energy is concentrated over a small
volume producing a high intensity heating. The induction heated slice is constructed
with enough thermal mass to overcome cooling effects of exhaust flow during cold starts
to enable manufacturers to achieve near-zero noxious emissions vehicle platforms.
Packaging the slice design in the context of current state-of-the art converters and
particulate filters is rendered easy by virtue of the small footprint of the slice
induction heater system. The same proven electronics that power a conventional induction
technology such as that described in
US Patent 9488085 are also used to power the slice induction heater design.
[0052] In another embodiment of the invention as shown in FIG. 7, the substrate of an upstream
brick 60 has an inductively heated rear end section 62 positioned immediately upstream
of a downstream emissions gas treatment brick 64. The downstream substrate 64 may
be inductively unheated and so depend for reaching light-off on the temperature of
incoming emissions gases that are inherently hot by virtue of being exhaust gas or
having had the exhaust gas temperature raised through inductive heating at the upstream
unit 60. Alternatively, as shown in FIG. 7A, the upstream unit may additionally have
an associated electromagnetic field generator at a front section of the upstream brick.
Alternatively, as shown in FIG. 7B, the downstream brick may have an electromagnetic
field generator at its front end. In each of FIG.s 7-7B, the three heating zones may
be optionally energized at different times or to a different power level from each
other. The upstream unit can also be configured for an emissions treatment that is
different in type from the emissions gas treatment process occurring in the downstream
unit. Any of the three end sections can be configured as a separate slice.
[0053] In the FIGS. 6 and 7, the various distributions of metal inserts in the inductively
heated substrate can be looked on as a metal matrix.
[0054] In a variation of the dedicated inductively heated pre-heater or post-heater embodiments
shown in FIGS. 6 and 7, the metal matrix is an inductively heated coiled, corrugated
metal slice 46 as shown in the embodiment of FIGs. 8 and 8A.
[0055] In a further embodiment, the metal matrix is a number of concentric metal blades
48 surrounding an open hub 50 as shown in the embodiment of FIGs. 9 and 9A.
[0056] In a further embodiment, the metal matrix is a mesh of randomly distributed metal
filaments 52 as shown in the embodiment of FIGs. 10 and 10A.
[0057] In a further embodiment, the metal matrix is a woven mesh of metal filament 54 as
shown in the embodiment of FIGs. 11 and 11A.
[0058] In a further embodiment, the metal matrix is a perforated metal plate as shown in
the embodiment of FIGs. 12 and 12A.
[0059] In a further embodiment, the pre-heater has a honeycomb ceramic substrate 32 but
with ceramic constituting the honeycomb walls heavily doped with metal as indicated
at 58 in the embodiment shown in FIGs. 13 and 13A.
[0060] In all of the illustrated pre-heater designs, the front brick pre-heater (or in some
cases a post-heater) is optimized to provide a relatively dense metal load to enable
rapid, high intensity inductive heating from the surrounding coil (not shown in FIGs.
8 to 13). However, the metal load is not so large nor the wires so densely packed
as to affect the flow of emissions gas by introducing an unacceptable pressure drop
into the exhaust line.
[0061] In another embodiment of the invention illustrated in FIG. 14, a heating unit for
use as a space heater has a ceramic substrate body through which extend passages,
with metal inserts of wire, pins or other metal filling in a subset of the passages.
An induction coil is mounted around the substrate body and is energized to generate
a varying electromagnetic field so that at least some of the generated electromagnetic
flux permeates metal wire inserts to inductively heat them. A fan is mounted so as
to force air along the passages that are not blocked by the metal wire inserts. In
use, heat transfers from the inductively heated metal bodies to adjacent substrate
body walls to heat the substrate body. In turn, at the unoccupied passages, heat transfers
from the substrate body to heat air that is being forced along the passages by the
fan. A heating unit of the sort illustrated in FIG. 14 can, for example, be used for
cabin heating of a motor vehicle. This is of particular value for electric vehicles
where there is no combustion engine or plug-in hybrids where engine operation and
associated heating may not be available until some time after initial vehicle usage.
[0062] The induction heating configurations previously described and illustrated can be
used with both catalytic converters and particulate filters (PFs). Such emissions
treatment units can either be inductively heated in any of the arrangements previously
described or can be positioned to receive heat from an inductively heated upstream
unit, whether that is the form of a section of a longer substrate or in the form of
a separate slice.
[0063] Other variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art and
the embodiments of the invention described and illustrated are not intended to be
limiting. The principles of the invention contemplate many alternatives having advantages
and properties evident in the exemplary embodiments.
[0064] According to another aspect of the invention, a gas heater comprises a ceramic honeycomb
substrate body having a first plurality of passages extending the length of the substrate
body for transmitting a flow of gas directed into the passages at one end of the substrate
from said one end to the other end thereof, a second plurality of linear passages
extending the length of the substrate body, a first plurality of elongate metal inserts
substantially blocking respective ones of the second plurality of passages, an electromagnetic
field generator configured to inductively heat the metal inserts and a flowing gas
source upstream of the substrate body for producing said flow of gas. The flowing
gas source can be an internal combustion engine with the gas being gaseous emissions
from the internal combustion engine. In an alternative, the flowing gas source is
a fan mounted adjacent said one end of the substrate and operable to blow air into
passages of the first plurality thereof.
[0065] According to another aspect of the invention, an assembly for use in treating gaseous
emissions comprises a metal matrix and a plurality of passages through the matrix
for the passage of emissions gas through the passages entering at one end of the metal
matrix and exiting at the other end of the metal matrix, an electromagnetic field
generator configured to inductively heat the metal in the matrix and thereby to heat
emissions gas passing along the matrix, and a substrate body having a plurality of
linear passages for receiving emissions gas exiting from the other end of the metal
matrix, the metal matrix generally aligned with the substrate body. The metal matrix
can be one of an inductively heated coil, a corrugated metal slice, a plurality of
concentric metal blades surrounding an open hub, a mesh of randomly distributed metal
filaments, a woven mesh of metal filament, and a honeycomb ceramic substrate with
the ceramic heavily doped with metal.
1. An assembly for use in treating gaseous emissions comprising a first substrate body
having a first plurality of linear passages extending the length of the first substrate
body for the passage of emissions gas from one end to the other end of the first substrate
body, a second substrate body having a second plurality of linear passages for receiving
emissions gas exiting from the other end of the first substrate body, the first substrate
body generally aligned with, but separated from, the second substrate body, one of
the substrate bodies having an elongate metal body in each of a subset of the plurality
of passages of the one substrate body with concentration of metal per unit volume
in the one substrate body increasing towards one end of said one substrate body, and
an electromagnetic field generator configured to inductively heat the metal bodies
and thereby to heat said one substrate body.
2. The assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein said one substrate body is the first substrate
body.
3. The assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein said one substrate body is the second
substrate body.
4. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3, wherein the length of said one substrate
body is a fraction of the length of said other substrate body, the fraction being
between 2% and 50%.
5. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4, wherein the subset of passages occupied
by said metal bodies in the one substrate body has a range between 1:2 and a 1:49
density occupation of the plurality of passages in said one substrate body.
6. The assembly as claimed in claims 1 to 4, wherein the subset of passages occupied
by said metal bodies in the one substrate body has a range between 1:4 and a 1:16
density occupation of the plurality of passages in said one substrate body.
7. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 6, wherein the first substrate body
is separated from the second substrate body by a distance of the order of 2 to 6 mm.
8. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 7, wherein the number of passages per
unit area of the first substrate body is different from the number of passages per
unit area of the second substrate body.
9. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 8, wherein the metal bodies have length,
the maximum metal body length equalling substantially the length of said one substrate
body.
10. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 9, wherein the elongate metal bodies
are positioned closer to a first end of said one substrate body than to a second end
thereof.
11. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 10, wherein the shape of a rear face
of the first substrate body matches the shape of a front face of the second substrate
body.
12. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 11, wherein the passages of the other
substrate body are open passages.
13. The assembly as claimed in any of claims 1 to 12, wherein interior surfaces of the
linear passages of the other substrate body are coated with a first catalyst material
for accelerating gaseous emissions treatment.