Title of Invention

METHOD FOR OBTAINING A HOMOGENEOUS FILTRATION STRUCTURE FOR A CATALYTIC APPLICATION

Abstract The invention relates to a method of obtaining a homogeneous filtering structure for a catalytic application, which can be used as a particulate filter in an internal combustion engine exhaust line, said structure comprising a plurality of honeycomb filter elements in which a homogeneity criterion characteristic of the constituent support material of said elements, in the absence of a catalytic coating, is determined in a prior step, and then the elements making up the structure are selected by means of this homogeneity criterion so as to obtain a structure suitable for homogeneous deposition, within an element and from one element to another, of a catalyst for treating the pollutants in gas phase. The invention also relates to the homogeneous filtration structure obtained by said method.
Full Text METHOD FOR OBTAINING A HOMOGENEOUS FILTRATION STRUCUTRE
FOR A CATALYTIC APPLICATION
The invention relates to the field of particulate
filters, especially those used in an engine exhaust line for
eliminating the soot produced by the combustion of a diesel
fuel in an internal combustion engine. More precisely, the
invention relates to a method of obtaining a filtering
structure that can be used as a particulafe filter, said
structure being particularly suitable for homogeneously
depositing a material that also gives it catalytic
properties.
Structures for filtering the soot particles contained in
internal combustion engine exhaust gases are well known in
the prior art. These structures usually have a honeycomb
structure, one of the faces of the structure allowing entry
of the exhaust gases to be filtered and the other face for.
exit of the filtered exhaust gases. This structure comprises,
between the entry and exit faces, a number of adjacent ducts
or channels of mutually parallel axes separated by porous
filtration walls, which ducts are closed off at one or other
of their ends so as to define inlet chambers opening onto the
entry face and outlet chambers opening onto the exit face. To
achieve good sealing, the peripheral part of the structure; is
surrounded by a coating cement. These channels are
alternately closed off in an order such that the exhaust
gases, on passing through the honeycomb body, are forced to
pass through the sidewalls of the inlet channels in order to
rejoin the outlet channels. In this way, the particulates or
soot particles are deposited on the porous walls of the
filter or body and accumulate thereon. Usually, the filter
bodies are made of a porous ceramic, for example from
cordicrile or silicon carbide.
During its use, the particulate filter is subjected, in
a known manner, to a succession of filtration (soot
accumulation) phases and regeneration (soot elimination)
phases. During the filtration phases, the soot particles
emitted by the engine are retained and deposited inside the
filter. During the regeneration phases, the soot particles
are burnt off inside the filter, so as to restore its
filtration properties. The porous structure is therefore
subjected to intense thermal and mechanical stresses which
may result in microcracks liable, over time, to result in the
unit suffering a severe loss of filtration capability, or
even in its complete deactivation. This phenomenon is
observed in particular on large-diameter monolithic filters.
To solve these problems and increase the lifetime of the
filters, it has been proposed more recently to make more
complex filtration structures by combining, into a filtration-
block, several monolithic honeycomb elements. The elements
are usually joined together by bonding them using a cement, of
ceramic nature, called joint cement in the rest of the
description. Examples of such filtering structures are for
example described in the patent applications EP 816 065, EP 1
142 619, EP 1 4bb 923 or WO 2004/0902 9/1.
The filters or porous soot filtration structures as
described above are mainly used on a Large scale in pollution
control devices for the exhaust gases of a diesel engine.
In addition to the soot treatment problem, the
conversion of the polluting gaseous emissions (i.e. mainly
nitrogen oxide (NOX) or sulfur oxide (SOX) and carbon
monoxide (CO), or even unburnt hydrocarbons) into less
harmful gases (such as gaseous nitrogen (N2) or carbon
dioxide (CO2)) requires an additional catalytic treatment.
To eliminate these gaseous pollutants, current.
particulate filters further include a catalytic coating
deposited at least on the surface of the channels and usually
in the pores of the walls. Depending on the processes
conventionally used, the raw honeycomb structure is
impregnated with a solution comprising the catalyst or a
precursor of" the catalyst.
Such processes may typically include an impregnation
step by immersion either in a solution containing a catalyst
precursor or the catalyst dissolved in water (or another
polar solvent) or in a suspension of catalytic particles in
water. One example of such a process is described by the
patent US 5 8 66 210. According to this process, by applying a
vacuum to the other end of the filter it is possible
thereafter for the solution to rise up into the structure and
consequently coat the internal walls of the honeycomb
structure. Alternatively, but more rarely, the impregnation
step may be carried out using a solution containing a
nonpolar solvent, such as an oil or a hydrocarbon, or
surfactants.
According to other ways of implementing the honeycomb
filter impregnation process, said impregnations may be
obtained by pumping, by applying a vacuum or by pressurining
the liquid containing the impregnation solution, at least at
one end of the monolith. Usually the processes described are
characterized by a combination of these various techniques,
over the course of successive steps, the final step making it
possible, by introducing pressurized air or by suction, to
remove the excess solution and/or obtain better dispersion of
the catalyst within the filter. One of the essential aims
sought by implementing these processes is to obtain a uniform
catalyst coating on, or even inside, at least part of the
porous walls of the channels making up the internal part, of
the structure and through which the exhaust gases pass.
Such processes, together with the devices for
implementing them, are for example described in the patent
applications or patents US 2003/044520, WO 2004/091786,
US 6 149 973, US 6 627 257, US 6 478 874, US b 866 210,
US 4 609 563, US 4 550 034, US 6 599 570, US 4 208 454 or
US 5 422 138.
One of the main problems arising during this
impregnation step for an assembled structure as described
above is how to determine the precise necessary amount of
catalyst or catalyst precursor that has to be deposited on
the surface and usually in the pores of the walls of each
constituent element of the filter. This amount must neither
be too low, in which case the effectiveness of the polluting-
gas treatment is appreciably impaired, nor too high so as to
avoid too great an increase in the pressure drop occasioned
in the exhaust line by the filter and a substantial
additional cost owing to the use of an excess amount of
catalyst based on precious metals. For maximum filter
effectiveness, it is also imperative that the distribution of
the catalyst on the filter be as homogeneous as possible
within an element, but also from one element to another in
the assembly.
Furthermore, an inhomogeneous distribution of the
catalyst coating results in reduced effectiveness of the
catalytic gas treatment but also, in the regions of the
filter where the catalyst concentration is lower, in a delay-
in initializing the soot combustion reaction. It has now been
discovered that the soot particles accumulate in these
regions and that their presence results , when filter
operation is characterized by successive regenerations, in
high thermomechanical stresses throughout the volume of the
filter thereby reducing its performance and its lifetime.
The patent application EP 1 462 171 thus describes a
process intended for measuring the precise amount of catalyst
that can be deposited on a honeycomb structure, the process
including, for each element, an initial step of determining a
water adsorption value, said value then being printed, for
example by means of a marker, on said element in such a way
that it can be read subsequently and used as reference for
adjusting the precise amount of catalyst to be incorporated
into this element.
However, such a process requires the means for
depositing the catalytic coating to be continually adapted
and recalibrated according to the water absorption value read
specific to each element. This results in greater complexity,
additional cost and longer duration of the deposition
process.
Thus, there is an unmet need for an easier method of
obtaining a homogeneous filtration structure, that is to say
capable of homogenous catalyst deposition, in which it will
be possible to deposit, rapidly and without additional
handling, an optimum homogeneous catalytic coating within an
element, from one element to another in the structure, and
even over an entire population of said structure. Such a
method forms the subject of the present invention.
More precisely, the present invention relates to a
method of obtaining a homogeneous filtering structure for a
catalytic application, which can be used as a particulate
filter in an internal combustion engine exhaust line, said
structure comprising a plurality of honeycomb filter elements
and being characterized in that:
a) a homogeneity criterion characteristic of the
constituent support material of said elements, in the absence
of a catalytic coating, is determined in a prior step; and
b) the elements that may make up the structure are
selected by means of this homogeneity criterion so as to
obtain a suitable structure with a homogeneous coating,
within an element and from one element to another, of a
catalyst lor treating gaseous pollutants.
More precisely, the invention relates to a method of
obtaining a homogeneous filtering structure for a catalytic
application, which can be used as a particulate filter in an
internal combustion engine exhaust line, said structure
comprising a plurality of honeycomb filter elements and being
characterized in that:
a) a homogeneity criterion characteristic of the
constituent support material of said elements, in the absence
of a catalytic coating, is determined in a prior step, said
criterion being chosen from the group formed by the average
water absorption value, the mid-height width of the pore
distribution peak and the pressure for unclogging the pores
of the material after immersion in a liquid such as water;
b) the elements making up said structure are selected and
sorted by means of this homogeneity criterion; and
c) said elements meeting said homogeneity criterion are
assembled so as to obtain a structure suitable for
homogeneous deposition, within an element and from one
element to another, of a catalyst for treating the pollutants
in gas phase.
The method may further include a step d) in which said
catalyst is deposited in an appropriate amount before or
after the assembly step, in order in the end to obtain a
homogeneous catalytic filter.
By applying such a homogeneity criterion it is possible
according to the invention to guarantee that the catalytic
coating is homogenous within a population of filters, by
appropriately selecting the elements making up the said
filters.
Preferably, the support material is based on an SiC
carbide, that is to say it comprises at least 30%, preferably
at least 70% and even more preferably at least 98% SiC by
weight .
According to a first possible way of implementing the
present method, the homogeneity criterion is measured
relative to a variance or a standard deviation measured using
a mean water adsorption value characteristic of a population
of elements.
According to a second possible way of implementing the
present method, the homogeneity criterion is the mid-height
width of the pore distribution peak measured by mercury
porosimetry.
According to a third possible way of implementing the
present method, the homogeneity criterion is the pressure for
unclogging the pores by a fluid after the element has been
immersed in a liquid. For example, according to this third
method of implementation, the homogeneity criterion may be
the pressure for unclogging the pores, measured on a test
specimen pro-impregnated with water by immersion. The method
typically consists in immersing the unitary element for at
least 30 minutes in a liquid, for example and preferably
water. After removing the water in the channels, by gently
shaking the part and after wiping off, if required, the
excess water on the surface with a rag, the unitary element
is placed in a pressure drop rig well known to those skilled
in the art. This device consists in injecting a gas,
preferably air, or alternatively a fluid having no chemical
interaction with the impregnation liquid, so as to expel the
liquid imbibed by the pores of the constituent material of
the unitary element. The fluid must pass into the section of
the unitary element and through the wall of each inlet
channel so as to emerge via the adjacent outlet channel. This
device includes a pressure sensor upstream downstream of the
unitary element so as to measure the differential pressure
for various inlet gas flow rates. The flow rate and
differential pressure measurements are typically carried out
at room temperature, however, without departing from the
scope of the invention, hot measurements are also possible
provided that the test temperature is sufficiently below the
temperature at which the impregnation liquid vaporizes. The
flow rate used in the case of air injection are typically a
few m3/h, for example between 1 and 20 m3/h. The unclogging
pressure may therefore be measured for example from the
pressure/flow rate curve. The unclogging pressure is the
pressure at which a first plateau is observed, during which
the differential pressure remains virtually constant despite
the increase in flow rate. On a filter element based on
porous recrystallized SiC material, depending on the porosity
and the sintering conditions, this unclogging pressure is
typically from a few tens of millibars to several hundred
millibars (1 bar - 0,1 MPa) for a flow rate range typically
lying from 1 to 2 0 m3/h approximately.
Usually, the homogeneity criterion is determined as a
function of a porosity range and preferably by reference to a
median diameter range of the pores.
The method as described above applies in particular when
the porosity of the support material is between 44% and 50%
and its median pore diameter is between 10 µm and 18 µm, such
as for example a material based on recrystallized silicon
carbide.
In this case, the selected elements have for example a
standard deviation of less than 2%, preferably less than 1 %,
relative to a water adsorption value measured beforehand.
According to a possible variant, the selected elements
have a porosity peak mid-height width measured by mercury
porosimetry of less than 5 µm.
More generally, the present method may in particular be
used for the manufacture of a homogeneous filtering structure
for a catalytic application or for the manufacture of a
catalytic filter, the support material of which has a
porosity between 30% and 70% and/or a median pore diameter of
between 6 µm and 30 µm.
The present invention also relates to the homogeneous
filtering structure for a catalytic application and to a
catalytic filter that can be obtained using the method
described above.
The invention will be better understood on reading the
following examples of the invention, which are not limiting
under any of the aspects described and are only provided for
better understanding the invention.
Example 1 (comparative example):
A first: population of 100 monolithic silicon carbide
honeycomb elements were synthesized using the techniques of
the prior art, for example those described in the patents
EP 816 065, EP 1 142 619, EP 1 455 923 or WO 2004/090294.
To do this, the following were mixed in a mixer:
- 3000 g of a mixture of silicon carbide particles with
a purity of greater than 98% and having a particle size such
that 70% by weight of the particles have a diameter greater
than 10 microns, the median diameter of this particle size
fraction being less than 300 microns (within the context of
the present description, the median diameter denotes the
diameter of the particles below which 50% by weight of the
population lies) ; and
150 g of an organic binder of the cellulose derivative
type .
Water was added and mixing was continued for the
formation of a homogeneous paste, the plasticity of which
allowed it to be extruded through a die so as to obtain a
honeycomb structure, the dimensional characteristics of which
are given in Table 1:
Next, the green monoliths obtained were dried by
microwave heating for a time sufficient to bring the
chemically unbound water content to less than 1% by weight.
The channels of each face of the monolith were blocked
alternately using well-known techniques, for example those
described in the application WO 2004/065088.
The monoliths were then fired at a temperature of at least
2100°C, this temperature being maintained for 5 hours.
An individual water absorption measurement was carried
out on the set of monolithic elements thus produced,
according to the teachings of the application EP 1 4 62 171.
The standard deviation obtained relative to the water
absorption moan was close to 4%.
Next, 16 monolithic elements were selected at random
from this first; population.
High-pressure mercury porosimetry analyses were carried
out on the other elements, by means of a porosimeter of the
Micromerities 95000 type. These measurements show that the
porosity of the elements varied between 44% and 50% and the
median pore diameter varied between 10 µm and 18 µm. The pore
size distribution was of the unimodal type for all the
elements, independently of their porosity or their median
pore diameter. The mean of mid-height width of the mercury
porosity peak obtained on all these elements was 6.1 µm.
The 16 randomly selected elements were joined together
so as to obtain a filtering structure assembled using the
well-known methods described in the abovementioned
applications.
The assembled structure obtained was then immersed in a
bath of an aqueous solution containing the appropriate
proportions of a platinum precursor in H2PtCl6 form and of a
precursor of cerium oxide CeO2 (in cerium nitrate form) and
of a precursor of zirconium oxide ZrO2 (in zirconyl nitrate
form) using the principles described in the publication
EP 1 338 322. Al . The filter was impregnated with the solution
using a method of implementation similar to that described in
the patent US 5 866 210. The filter was then dried at about
150°C then heated at a temperature of about 600°C.
The catalytic filter thus obtained underwent a
regeneration on an engine test bed after said filter had been
charged with a limiting mass of soot of 7 g/liter. The
regeneration conditions were the following: after the engine
stabilized to a speed of 1700 rpm for a torque of 9.5 Nm for
2 minutes, a hydrocarbon post-injection was carried out for
10 minutes.
The fresh filter weighed 1800 g, weighed 1828 g after
charging with soot and weighed 180b g after regeneration.
The filter was recovered and cut into slices. It was
observed that the unburnt soot was located more particularly
in certain unitary parts (elements) of the filter.
Of the 28 g of soot deposited in the filter, only 23 q
had burnt of. Without being tied to any theory, it is very
probable that, owing to the small amount of catalyst present
in certain regions of the filter (i.e. those in which soot-
was observed), the hydrocarbons injected for the regeneration
were not all able to be oxidized in the presence of the
catalyst. In these regions, the exothermic reaction did not.
allow the minimum temperature needed to burn off the soot
(550°C) to be reached. The filter obtained according to this
example, which was not homogeneous, therefore gradually
accumulated soot in certain regions during normal operation
on the vehicle, thereby resulting in very severe and
impromptu regenerations, with a large exotherm and the
formation of cracks causing it to become progressively
inactivated or even a not insignificant risk of the filter
being destroyed.
Example 2:
A second population of 100 monolithic elements was
synthesized in a second step, under the same conditions as in
Example 1.
A wafer absorption measurement was carried out
individually on the set of monolithic elements making up this
second population, according to the teachings of the
application EP 1 462 171, with a result identical to that of
Example 1 .
Next, two series of 16 monolithic elements were selected
from this second population in such a way that the standard
deviation obtained relative to the mean water absorption was
less than 1% for these 32 elements.
The high-pressure mercury porosimetry analyses carried
out on the remaining elements showed, as in the erase of.
Example 1, a mean porosity for each element between 44% and
50% for a mean pore diameter between 10 µm and 18 µm, and
with a pore size distribution of unimodal type.
The 16 elements making up the first series were
assembled as previously, so as to obtain an assembled
filtering structure the structural- characteristics of which
were identical to those described in Table 1.
The structure was then impregnated with catalyst using an
operating method identical to that of Example 1.
The filter was regenerated on the engine test bed with a
limiting mass of soot of 7 g/l according to an experimental
protocol identical to that of Example 1 . The fresh filter
weighed 1800 g, weighed 1828 g after charging with soot and
weighed 1801 g after regeneration.
The regenerated filter was recovered and cut into
slices. This time, no soot was observed in the unitary parts
of the filter. The filter was satisfactory from the
homogeneity standpoint.
The mean of the mid-height width of the porosity peak
obtained on the second series of 16 elements selected was
3.7 µm .
1. A method of obtaining a homogeneous filtering structure
for a catalytic application, which can be used as a
particulate filter in an internal combustion engine
exhaust line, said structure comprising a plurality of
honeycomb filter elements and being characterized in that:
a) a homogeneity criterion characteristic of the
constituent support: material of said elements, in the absence
of a catalytic coating, is determined in a prior step, said
criterion being chosen from the group formed by the average
water absorption value, the mid-height width of the pore
distribution peak and the pressure for unclogging the pores
of the material after immersion in a liquid such as water;
b) the elements making up said structure are
selected and sorted by means of this homogeneity criterion;
and
c) said elements meeting said homogeneity criterion
are assembled so as to obtain a structure suitable for
homogeneous deposition, within an element and from one
element to another, of a catalyst for treating the pollutants
in gas phase.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, which further includes a
step d) in which said catalyst is deposited in an
appropriate amount before or after the assembly stop.
3. The method as claimed i.n claim 1 or 2, in which the
support material is based on an SiC carbide, that is to
say it comprises at least 30%, preferably at least 70% ana
even more preferably at least 98% SiC by weight.
4. The method as claimed in one of the preceding claims, in
which the homoqeneity criterion is measured relative to a
variance or a standard deviation measured using a mean
water adsorption value characteristic of a population of
elements.
5. The method as claimed in one of claims 1 to 3, in which
the homogeneity criterion is the mid-height width of the
pore distribution peak measured by mercury porosimetry.
6. The method as claimed in one of claims 1 to 3, in which
the homogeneity criterion is the pressure for unc.logging
the pores by a fluid after the element has been immersed
in a liquid.
7. The method as claimed in one of the preceding claims, in
which the homogeneity criterion is determined as a
function of a porosity range and preferably by reference
to a median diameter range of the pores.
8. The method as claimed in claim 7, in which the porosity of
the support material is between 44% and 50% and its median
pore diameter is between 10 µm and 18 µm.
9. The method as claimed in claim 8, in which the selected
elements have a standard deviation of less than 2%,
preferably less than 1%, relative to a water adsorption
value measured beforehand.
10. The method as claimed in claim 9, in which the selected
elements have a porosity peak mid-height width measured
by mercury porosimetry of less than 5 µm.
11. A homogeneous filtering structure for a catalytic
application, which can be obtained using the method
described in one of the preceding claims.
12. A catalytic filter that can be obtained using the method
described in one of the preceding claims.
13. The use of the method as claimed in one of" claims 1 to 7
for the manufacture of a homogeneous filtering structure
for a catalytic application or for the manufacture of a
catalytic filter, the support material of which has a
porosity between 30% and 70% and/or a median pore
diameter of between 6 µm and 30 µm.

The invention relates to a method of obtaining a homogeneous filtering structure for a catalytic application, which can be used as a particulate filter in an internal combustion engine exhaust line, said structure comprising a plurality
of honeycomb filter elements in which a homogeneity criterion characteristic of the constituent support material of said elements, in the absence of a catalytic coating, is
determined in a prior step, and then the elements making up the structure are selected by means of this homogeneity criterion so as to obtain a structure suitable for homogeneous deposition, within an element and from one
element to another, of a catalyst for treating the pollutants in gas phase.
The invention also relates to the homogeneous filtration structure obtained by said method.

Documents:

01388-kolnp-2008-abstract.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-claims.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-correspondence others.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-description complete.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-form 1.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-form 2.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-form 3.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-form 5.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-international publication.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-international search report.pdf

01388-kolnp-2008-pct request form.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-(29-10-2013)-ANNEXURE TO FORM 3.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-(29-10-2013)-CLAIMS.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-(29-10-2013)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-(29-10-2013)-OTHERS.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-(29-10-2013)-PETITION UNDER RULE 137.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 1.1.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS-1.1.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-FORM 18-1.1.pdf

1388-kolnp-2008-form 18.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-FORM 26.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-ABSTRACT.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-CLAIMS.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 1.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 2.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 3.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-FORM 5.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-GRANTED-SPECIFICATION-COMPLETE.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-INTERNATIONAL PUBLICATION.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-INTERNATIONAL SEARCH REPORT & OTHERS.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-OTHERS-1.1.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-OTHERS.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-PA.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-PETITION UNDER RULE 137.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-PRIORITY DOCUMENT.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf

1388-KOLNP-2008-TRANSLATED COPY OF PRIORITY DOCUMENT.pdf


Patent Number 258945
Indian Patent Application Number 1388/KOLNP/2008
PG Journal Number 08/2014
Publication Date 21-Feb-2014
Grant Date 17-Feb-2014
Date of Filing 07-Apr-2008
Name of Patentee SAINT-GOBAIN CENTRE DE RECHERCHES ET D'ETUDES EUROPEEN
Applicant Address LES MIROIRS 18 AVENUE D'ALSACE, F-92400 COURBEVOIE
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 ANDY, PATRICIA CHEZ MME BIANCOTTI, L'AIGUILLE N°5, F-84300 LES TAILLADES
2 GLEIZE, VINCENT, MARC 9, RUE TERRE NOIRE, F-84000, AVIGNON
3 BARDON, SEBASTIEN 9, RUE SORBIE, F-75020 PARIS
PCT International Classification Number B01J 35/04
PCT International Application Number PCT/FR2006/050963
PCT International Filing date 2006-09-29
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 0552979 2005-09-30 France