METHODS IN FORMING TEMPERATURE RESISTANT INORGANIC NANO-SCALE MEMBRANE LAYER FOR IMPROVED HIGH TEMPERATURE FILTRATION
20220008852 · 2022-01-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D2279/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B41/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/457
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B38/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/89
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/457
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/4511
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02T10/12
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01D2239/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B35/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B35/195
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B35/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/4535
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F01N2330/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C04B41/51
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/522
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D39/2034
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B41/522
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/4582
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/4535
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D39/2075
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B38/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F01N2330/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N3/2825
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C04B35/195
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F01N3/021
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C04B41/51
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F01N3/0222
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B01D46/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B38/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/45
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Aspects of the disclosure provide methods of making a coated filtration material. Various methods include providing a base filter material and applying a first coating to the base filter material, the first coating being in nanoparticle form. A second coating is applied on top of the first coating, the second coating being a nanoscale inorganic material. The method further includes removing the first coating in such a way that the second coating remains on the base filter material. Methods of the disclosure can be used to manufacture coated filtration materials having a coating with a porosity of 90% or greater and a pore size in the range of 0.1-0.5 μm.
Claims
1. A method of manufacturing a coated filtration material, the method comprising: providing a base filter material; applying a first coating to the base filter material, the first coating being in nanoparticle form; applying a second coating on top of the first coating, the second coating being a nanoscale inorganic material; and removing the first coating in such a way that the second coating remains on the base filter material.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of removing includes chemically removing the first coating.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of removing includes thermally removing the first coating.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the first coating is selected from the group consisting of hygroscopic salt and carbon soot.
5. The method of claim 1, where in the second coating includes a metal oxide.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the second coating has a porosity greater than 90%.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the base filter material is selected from the group consisting of sintered ceramic powder media and sintered metal powder media.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the second coating has particles size in the range of 20-200 nm.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the base filter material has a porosity in the range of 30-70%.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the base filter material has a pore size in the range of 1 to 110 μm.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the second coating has a thickness of 50 μm or less.
12. A coated filtration material comprising: a base filter material having an outer surface and a plurality of pores extending from the outer surface and having a depth; and a coating, the coating being a nanoscale inorganic material positioned on the outer surface; wherein the volume of the pores are free from the coating and the coating has a porosity of at least 90%.
13. The coated filtration material of claim 12, wherein the base filter material has a porosity in the range of 30-70%.
14. The coated filtration material of claim 12, wherein the coating includes a metal oxide.
15. The coated filtration material of claim 12, wherein the base filter material is selected from the group consisting of sintered ceramic powder media and sintered metal powder media.
16. The coated filtration material of claim 12, wherein the second coating has particles size in the range of 20-200 nm.
17. The coated filtration material of claim 12, wherein the second coating has a thickness of 50 μm or less.
18. The coated filtration material of claim 12, wherein the base filter material has a pore size in the range of 1 to 110 μm.
19. The coated filtration material of claim 12, wherein the coating has a pore size in the range of 0.1-0.5 μm.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013] Generally, aspects of the present disclosure provide a coated filtration material that can sustain high temperature (e.g., engine exhaust) while offering better efficiency-backpressure tradeoff than current available wall-flow substrates. Methods of the disclosure maintain the macroscopic wall-flow configuration of a base filter material, which is believed to be one preferred design to provide superb filtration area in unit filter volume. At the same time, a coating added on the upstream or outer surface of the base filter material significantly enhances the filtration of the coated filtration material at a microscopic level.
[0014] Techniques of the disclosure can be applied to improve filter performance in almost every high-temperature filtration application. Specifically, for vehicle after-treatment applications such as Diesel Particulate filters or Gasoline Particulate Filters, nano-scale membrane coated filters can be adopted using the present techniques to dramatically improve both initial filtration efficiency and soot loading behavior of existing Diesel Particulate filters or Gasoline Particulate Filters. The aspects of the disclosure are believed to be particularly beneficial for catalyst-coated Diesel Particulate filters or Gasoline Particulate Filters as the present methods can overcome the downside of conventional Diesel Particulate filters or Gasoline Particulate Filters, which tend to further lose their already mediocre efficiency after being catalyst-coated.
[0015] One example of a coated filtration material 10 of the disclosure during an intermediate stage of manufacture is illustrated schematically in
[0016] At the illustrated intermediate stage of
[0017] Referring now in addition to
[0018] In other examples, the first material of the first coating 30 can include nanoparticles made of hygroscopic salt, which can be removed later by dissolving in deionized water. As the preliminary step in methods of the disclosure is to occupy substantially all available micro-pores in the base filter material with the nanoparticles, the nanoparticles can be any of a variety of materials provided in nanoparticle form that can sustain high temperature (i.e. a temperature for their intended application) such as silica, alumina, carbon soot or the like, for example.
[0019] The aforementioned methods form a coated filtration material, which includes a highly porous (porosity of at least 95%) second coating on top of the base filter material (in some embodiments having a porosity of about 30% to about 70% and in other embodiments the porosity is in the range of about 40% to about 65%), with much smaller pore size in nanoscale, which significantly improves the filtration performance of the coated filtration material. The initial filtration efficiency can be enhanced by more than one order of magnitude, with only a small amount of backpressure penalty. The second coating on the base filter material also largely extends the useful lifetime of the base filter material (without the second coating as applied by methods of the disclosure) between each regeneration cycle in engine emission applications.
Example 1
[0020] In one example, the first coating includes soot nanoparticles. Soot nanoparticles can be easily generated from a combustion process (e.g., a simple diffusion flame). After deposition on a ceramic base filter material, the soot nanoparticles can be removed by thermally heating the coated filter to 500-650° C. under an air environment (or nitrogen with only trace amount of oxygen). This example method is beneficial for ceramic a base filter material where material oxidation is not a concern.
Example 2
[0021] In another example, the first coating includes soot nanoparticles. Soot nanoparticles can be easily generated from a combustion process (e.g., a simple diffusion flame). After deposition on a metallic base filter material, the soot nanoparticles can be removed by thermally heating the coated filter to a temperature between 500-650° C. under a nitrogen environment with only trace amount of oxygen to prevent oxidation of the metallic base filter.
Example 3
[0022] In yet another example, the first coating includes water-soluble salts in nanoparticle form. Water-soluble salts in nanoparticle from can be easily generated from aqueous salt solutions by a mechanical atomizer. Examples of salt materials can include, but are not limited to sodium chloride or potassium chloride. After deposition on the base filter material, the first coating can be removed by simply soaking and gently washing the coated base material under deionized water. This method is beneficial when the base filter material is metallic and/or when metal oxidation needs to be eliminated.
[0023] Demonstration:
[0024] In this particular demonstration, one typical wall-flow ceramic core sample is chosen as the base filter material. The base filter material is made of cordierite, with a cell density of 300 cpsi (cells per square inch) and a wall thickness of 12 mil (305 μm). The base filter material is 1″ in diameter and 6″ in length. A ceramic wall or outer surface in the base filter material has a porosity of 60% with a mean pore size of −15 μm. This base filter material sample is a representative example of state-of-art filter materials for gasoline particulate filter (GPF) applications, which is used to remove nanometer scale soot particles from gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine exhaust.
[0025] After the filtration efficiency of the uncoated or bare base filter material sample being evaluated (with detailed descriptions below), this sample was then coated as generally shown and discussed with respect to
[0026]
[0027] A small portion (typically 1.0 liter per minute) of this diluted soot-laden aerosol flow is then introduced into a Differential Mobility Analyzer (DMA, TSI Inc., Model 3081) and only particles with mobility in a narrow range exit. These nearly mono-dispersed soot particles represent the challenge aerosols for the filter media initial collection efficiency measurements. Their concentrations are maintained to be less than 10000 #/cc to avoid any loading effect on the measurements. A Condensation Particle Counter (CPC, TSI Inc., Model 3775) was used to measure the soot particle number concentrations both upstream and downstream of the filter sample. The collection efficiency (E) of each particle size is determined by taking the ratio of downstream-to-upstream reading, after correcting for particle loss as measured in a blank test; thus,
[0028] Here, P denotes the size dependent penetration of soot particles, Conc.sub.up and Conc.sub.dn are the upstream and downstream particle number concentrations, and Conc.sub.up,blank and Conc.sub.dn,blank are the upstream and downstream particle number concentrations for the blank test. The latter is conducted under the same test condition as the efficiency measurement, but with no filter media in the filter holder; its purpose is to account for particle losses in the test system, which mostly comes from diffusion and thermophoresis of soot particles. The filter sample is evaluated at a space velocity of 17.5K and under 23° C.
[0029] [29] As shown in
[0030] Aspects of the disclosure relate to methods for the deposition of a highly porous layer into ceramic filtration materials to improve their performance. In one example, a two-step coating process is used to coat a nanoscale filtration layer.