CATALYTICALLY ACTIVE PARTICULATE FILTER
20200362738 ยท 2020-11-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Jan Schoenhaber (Darmstadt, DE)
- Naina Deibel (Pfungstadt, DE)
- Martin ROESCH (Rodgau, DE)
- Stephanie Spiess (Darmstadt, DE)
Cpc classification
F01N3/0217
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N3/0857
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01D2255/908
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01N3/0842
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N3/035
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01D53/945
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2258/014
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01N2510/0682
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N2330/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N3/0821
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
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
F01N2330/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N3/101
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01J35/19
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J37/0244
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01N3/0222
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N3/0835
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01N3/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01N3/021
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention relates to a particulate filter which comprises a wall flow filter of length L and two different catalytically active coatings Y and Z, wherein the wall flow filter comprises channels E and A that extend in parallel between a first and a second end of the wall flow filter and are separated by porous walls which form the surfaces O.sub.E and O.sub.A, respectively, and wherein the channels E are closed at the second end and the channels A are closed at the first end. The invention is characterized in that the coating Y is located in the channels E on the surfaces O.sub.E and the coating Z is located in the channels A on the surfaces O.sub.A.
Claims
1. Particulate filter for removing particles, carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides out of the exhaust gas of combustion engines operated with stoichiometric air/fuel mixture, comprising a wall flow filter of length L and two different coatings Y and Z, wherein the wall flow filter comprises channels E and A that extend in parallel between a first and a second end of the wall flow filter and are separated by porous walls, which form surfaces O.sub.E and O.sub.A, respectively, and wherein the channels E are closed at the second end and the channels A are closed at the first end, characterized in that coating Y is located in the channels E on the surfaces O.sub.E and extends from the first end of the wall flow filter over a length of 51 to 90% of length L, and coating Z is located in the channels A on the surfaces O.sub.A and extends from the second end of the wall flow filter over a length of 51 to 90% of length L.
2. Particulate filter according to claim 1, characterized in that the coating Y extends from the first end of the wall flow filter to 57 to 65% of length L of the wall flow filter.
3. Particulate filter according to claim 1, characterized in that the coating Z extends from the second end of the wall flow filter to 57 to 65% of length L of the wall flow filter.
4. Particulate filter according to claim 1, characterized in that the coatings Y and Z have a thickness between 5-250 m.
5. Particulate filter according to claim 1, characterized in that each of the coatings Y and Z contains one or more precious metals fixed to one or more carrier materials, and one or more oxygen storage components.
6. Particulate filter according to claim 5, characterized in that each of the coatings Y and Z contains the precious metals platinum, palladium and/or rhodium.
7. Particulate filter according to claim 5, characterized in that each of the coatings Y and Z contains the precious metals palladium, rhodium or palladium and rhodium.
8. Particulate filter according to claim 5, characterized in that the carrier materials for the precious metals are metal oxides with a BET surface area of 30 to 250 m.sup.2/g (determined according to DIN 66132, newest version as of date of filing).
9. Particulate filter according to claim 5, characterized in that the carrier materials for the precious metals are selected from the series consisting of aluminum oxide, doped aluminum oxide, silicon oxide, titanium dioxide and mixed oxides of one or more of these.
10. Particulate filter according to claim 5, characterized in that the coatings Y and Z contain a cerium/zirconium/rare earth metal mixed oxide as oxygen storage component.
11. Particulate filter according to claim 10, characterized in that the cerium/zirconium/rare earth metal mixed oxides contain lanthanum oxide, yttrium oxide, praseodymium oxide, neodymium oxide and/or samarium oxide as rare earth metal oxide.
12. Particulate filter according to claim 10, characterized in that the cerium/zirconium/rare earth metal mixed oxides contain lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide, yttrium oxide and praseodymium oxide or lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide as rare earth metal oxide.
13. Particulate filter according to claim 5, characterized in that the coatings Y and Z both comprise lanthanum-stabilized aluminum oxide, palladium, rhodium or palladium and rhodium and an oxygen storage component comprising zirconium oxide, cerium oxide, lanthanum oxide, and yttrium oxide and/or praseodymium oxide.
14. Particulate filter according to claim 13, characterized in that coating Z comprises an additional oxygen storage component which contains zirconium oxide, cerium oxide, lanthanum oxide, and praseodymium oxide and/or yttrium oxide.
15. Particulate filter which comprises a wall flow filter of length L and two different coatings Y and Z, wherein the wall flow filter comprises channels E and A that extend in parallel between a first and a second end of the wall flow filter and are separated by porous walls forming surfaces O.sub.E and O.sub.A, respectively, and wherein the channels E are closed at the second end and the channels A are closed at the first end, characterized in that coating Y is located in channels E on the surfaces O.sub.E and extends from the first end of the wall flow filter to 57 to 65% of length L and contains aluminum oxide in an amount of 35 to 60% by weight based on the total weight of coating Y, palladium, rhodium or palladium and rhodium and an oxygen storage component in an amount of 40 to 50% by weight based on the total weight of coating Y, wherein the oxygen storage component comprises zirconium oxide, cerium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide, and coating Z is located in channels A on the surfaces O.sub.A and extends from the second end of the wall flow filter to 57 to 65% of length L and contains aluminum oxide in an amount of 30 to 50% by weight based on the total weight of the coating, palladium, rhodium or palladium and rhodium and oxygen storage components in a total amount of 50 to 80% by weight based on the total weight of coating Z, wherein an oxygen storage component contains zirconium oxide, cerium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide and another zirconium oxide, cerium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide.
16. Method for removing particles, carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides out of the exhaust gas of combustion engines operated with stoichiometric air/fuel mixture, characterized in that the exhaust gas is passed over a particulate filter according to claim 1.
Description
[0063]
[0064] The invention is explained in more detail in the following examples.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 1
[0065] Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly for coating a commercially available wall flow filter substrate, the coating being introduced into the porous filter wall over 100% of the substrate length. The total load of this filter amounted to 75 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 1.27 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. It is hereinafter referred to as VGPF1.
EXAMPLE 1
Coating the Input Channels
[0066] a) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 56:44. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat a commercially available wall flow filter substrate. The coating suspension was coated onto the filter walls of the substrate in the input channels to a length of 60% of the filter length. The load of the inlet channel amounted to 62.5 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.06 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
Coating the Output Channels
[0067] b) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the output channels to a length of 60% of the filter length. The load of the outlet channel amounted to 62.5 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.06 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. The total load of this filter thus amounted to 75 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 1.27 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. It is hereinafter referred to as GPF1.
Catalytic Characterization
[0068] The particulate filters VGPF1 and GPF1 were aged together in an engine test bench aging process. This aging process consists of an overrun cut-off aging process with an exhaust gas temperature of 950 C. before the catalyst inlet (maximum bed temperature of 1030 C.). The aging time was 19 hours (see Motortechnische Zeitschrift, 1994, 55, 214-218).
[0069] The catalytically active particulate filters were then tested in the aged state at an engine test bench in the so-called light-off test and in the lambda sweep test. In the light-off test, the light-off behavior is determined in the case of a stoichiometric exhaust gas composition with a constant average air ratio (=0.999 with 3.4% amplitude).
[0070] Table 1 below contains the temperatures T.sub.50 at which 50% of the considered components are respectively converted.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 T.sub.50 HC T.sub.50 CO T.sub.50 NOx stoichiometric stoichiometric stoichiometric VGPF1 375 382 388 GPF1 363 367 368
[0071] The dynamic conversion behavior of the particulate filters was determined in a lambda sweep test in a range from =0.99-1.01 at a constant temperature of 510 C. The amplitude of in this case amounted to 3.4%. Table 2 shows the conversion at the intersection of the CO and NOx conversion curves, along with the associated HC conversion of the aged particulate filters.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 CO/NOx conversion at HC conversion at of the CO/ the point of intersection NOx point of intersection VGPF1 84% 96% GPF1 96% 97%
[0072] The particulate filter GPF1 according to the invention shows a marked improvement in light-off behavior and dynamic CO/NOx conversion in the aged state compared to VGPF1.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 2
[0073] a) Application of the in-Wall Coating:
[0074] Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly for coating a commercially available wall flow filter substrate, the coating being introduced into the porous filter wall over 100% of the substrate length. The total load of this filter amounted to 100 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 2.60 g/l having a palladium to rhodium ratio of 60:13.75. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
b) Coating the Input Channels
[0075] Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 50/50. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the input channels to a length of 25% of the filter length. The load of the input channel amounted to 58 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 2.30 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 10:3. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
c) Coating the Output Channels
[0076] Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 56/44. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under b), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the output channels to a length of 25% of the filter length. The load of the outlet channel amounted to 59 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.06 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 1:2. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
[0077] The total load of this filter thus amounted to 130 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 3.44 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 10:3. It is hereinafter referred to as VGPF2.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 3
[0078] a) Application of the in-Wall Coating:
[0079] Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly for coating a commercially available wall flow filter substrate, the coating being introduced into the porous filter wall over 100% of the substrate length. The total load of this filter amounted to 100 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 2.07 g/l having a palladium to rhodium ratio of 45:13.5. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
b) Coating the Input Channels
[0080] Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 50/50. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the input channels to a length of 60% of the filter length. The load of the input channel amounted to 90 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 2.30 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 10:3. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. The total load of this filter thus amounted to 154 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 3.44 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 10:3. It is hereinafter referred to as VGPF3.
EXAMPLE 2
Coating the Input Channels
[0081] a) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 56/44. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat a commercially available wall flow filter substrate. The coating suspension was coated onto the filter walls of the substrate in the input channels to a length of 60% of the filter length. The load of the inlet channel amounted to 83.33 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 2.87 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 10:3. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined,
Coating the Output Channels
[0082] b) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the output channels to a length of 60% of the filter length. The load of the outlet channel amounted to 83.33 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 2.87 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 10:3. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. The total load of this filter thus amounted to 100 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 3.44 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 10:3. It is hereinafter referred to as GPF2.
Catalytic Characterization
[0083] The particulate filters VGPF2, VGPF3 and GPF2 were aged together in an engine test bench aging process. This aging process consists of an overrun cut-off aging process with an exhaust gas temperature of 950 C. before the catalyst inlet (maximum bed temperature of 1030 C.). The aging time was 76 hours (see Motortechnische Zeitschrift, 1994, 55, 214-218).
[0084] The catalytically active particulate filters were then tested in the aged state at an engine test bench in the so-called light-off test and in the lambda sweep test. In the light-off test, the light-off behavior is determined in the case of a stoichiometric exhaust gas composition with a constant average air ratio (=0.999 with 3.4% amplitude).
[0085] Table 3 below contains the temperatures T.sub.50 at which 50% of the considered components are respectively converted.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 T.sub.50 HC T.sub.50 CO T.sub.50 NOx stoichiometric stoichiometric stoichiometric VGPF2 368 374 371 VGPF3 387 395 396 GPF2 332 335 332
[0086] The dynamic conversion behavior of the particulate filters was determined in a lambda sweep test in a range from =0.99 1.01 at a constant temperature of 510 C. The amplitude of in this case amounted to 3.4%. Table 4 shows the conversion at the intersection of the CO and NOx conversion curves, along with the associated HC conversion of the aged particulate filters.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 CO/NOx conversion at HC conversion at of the CO/ the point of intersection NOx point of intersection VGPF2 92 97 VGPF3 93 97 GPF2 98 98
[0087] The particulate filter GPF2 according to the invention shows a marked improvement in light-off behavior and dynamic CO/NOx conversion in the aged state compared to VGPF2 and VGPF3.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 4
Coating the Input Channels
[0088] a) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 56144. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat a commercially available wall flow filter substrate. The coating suspension was coated onto the filter walls of the substrate in the input channels to a length of 50% of the filter length. The load of the inlet channel amounted to 100 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.42 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
Coating the Output Channels
[0089] b) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the output channels to a length of 50% of the filter length. The load of the outlet channel amounted to 100 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.42 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. The total load of this filter thus amounted to 100 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 1.42 with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. It is hereinafter referred to as VGPF4.
EXAMPLE 3
Coating the Input Channels
[0090] a) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 56/44. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat a commercially available wall flow filter substrate. The coating suspension was coated onto the filter walls of the substrate in the input channels to a length of 55% of the filter length. The load of the inlet channel amounted to 91 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.16 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
Coating the Output Channels
[0091] b) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the output channels to a length of 55% of the filter length. The load of the outlet channel amounted to 91 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.16 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. The total load of this filter thus amounted to 100 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 1.42 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. It is hereinafter referred to as GPF3.
EXAMPLE 4
Coating the Input Channels
[0092] a) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 56/44. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat a commercially available wall flow filter substrate. The coating suspension was coated onto the filter walls of the substrate in the input channels to a length of 60% of the filter length. The load of the inlet channel amounted to 83.33 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.06 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined,
Coating the Output Channels
[0093] b) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide, Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the output channels to a length of 60% of the filter length. The load of the outlet channel amounted to 83.33 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 1.06 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. The total load of this filter thus amounted to 100 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 1.42 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. It is hereinafter referred to as GPF4.
EXAMPLE 5
Coating the Input Channels
[0094] a) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with an oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 56/44. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat a commercially available wall flow filter substrate. The coating suspension was coated onto the filter walls of the substrate in the input channels to a length of 80% of the filter length. The load of the inlet channel amounted to 62.5 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 0.79 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined.
Coating the Output Channels
[0095] b) Aluminum oxide stabilized with lanthanum oxide was suspended in water with a first oxygen storage component, which comprised 40% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and praseodymium oxide, and a second oxygen storage component, which comprised 24% by weight cerium oxide, zirconium oxide, lanthanum oxide and yttrium oxide. Both oxygen storage components were used in equal parts. The weight ratio of aluminum oxide and oxygen storage component was 30:70. The suspension thus obtained was then mixed with a palladium nitrate solution and a rhodium nitrate solution under constant stirring. The resulting coating suspension was used directly to coat the wall flow filter substrate obtained under a), wherein the filter walls of the substrate were coated in the output channels to a length of 80% of the filter length. The load of the outlet channel amounted to 62.5 g/l; the precious metal load amounted to 0.79 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1, The coated filter thus obtained was dried and then calcined. The total load of this filter thus amounted to 100 g/l; the total precious metal load amounted to 1.42 g/l with a ratio of palladium to rhodium of 5:1. It is hereinafter referred to as GPF5.
Catalytic Characterization
[0096] The particulate filters VGPF4, GPF3, GPF4 and GPF5 were compared at a cold blow test bench with respect to the exhaust back pressure.
[0097] Table 5 below shows pressure loss data which were determined at an air temperature of 21 C. and a volume flow rate of 600 m.sup.3. The values were normalized to VGPF3 for better clarity.
TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 VGPF4 GPF3 GPF4 GPF5 p normalized 100 92 78 70 to VGPF3
[0098] The filters GPF3, GPF4 and GPF5 according to the invention all surprisingly have a lower pressure loss than the comparative example VGPF4, even though they cover a larger surface of the filter walls. This is quite surprising since it could actually be assumed that longer coatings cause a higher exhaust back pressure, since here more exhaust gas must flow through the catalytic coatings, since as a result less exhaust gas can flow through the filter wall that is not provided with a coating.
[0099] It was furthermore systematically investigated what the main effects responsible for the lowest possible exhaust back pressure are. Here, various filters with different zone lengths (factor A) and washcoat layer thicknesses (factor B) were prepared and compared with one another. All filters had the same total washcoat load and the same precious metal content.
TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 6 Factor Name Unit Min Max A Zone length % 30 60 B Washcoat thickness g/l 50 80
[0100] The statistical evaluation shows that it is particularly advantageous to distribute the washcoat on as large a surface as possible on the filter walls with a resultant low layer thickness, instead of covering only a small surface with a high layer thickness, since a high layer thickness is to be regarded as the main cause of a high exhaust back pressure (
[0101] The catalytically active particulate filters were then tested in the aged state at an engine test bench in the so-called lambda sweep test. Surprisingly, the statistical evaluation of the test results also shows a significant advantage in the lambda sweep test if the catalytic coating is applied with a low layer thickness to as large a surface as possible (
[0102] In addition, it was investigated to what extent an embodiment consisting of one short and one long zone differs from an embodiment consisting of two long zones. For this purpose, a filter according to the invention with zone lengths of 60% of the filter length in each case was compared with a comparison filter with zone lengths of 90% in the inlet channel and 30% in the outlet channel. In the light-off test, in which the light-off behavior in the case of a stoichiometric exhaust gas composition with a constant average air ratio is determined (=0.999 with 3.4% amplitude), it is found that the filter according to the invention with zones lengths of 60% in each case can convert the corresponding exhaust gas components at lower temperatures than the filter not according to the invention with zone lengths of 90% and 30%. Table 7 below contains the temperatures T.sub.50 at which 50% of the considered components are respectively converted.
TABLE-US-00007 TABLE 7 Zone T.sub.50 HC T.sub.50 CO T.sub.50 NOx length stoichiometric stoichiometric stoichiometric 90:30 288 287 288 60:60 284 284 284