Re: [Biofuel] Lemon juice chemical refreshes car exhaust

2005-05-06 Thread Keith Addison



Thanks for posting this. It sounds like something you could do 
yourself. I wonder what strength of citric acid they used? It could 
also mean if you don't have a catalytic converter you could pick a 
used one up from a wreck and clean it up for use on your own car. I 
think... I don't know anything about catalytic converters, I've tried 
to find out before if a used one would do but didn't get a good 
answer.


Regards

Keith




http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050425/full/050425-10.html

Clean catalytic converters help to keep pollution down.

The age-old household tip that lemon juice makes for a great 
cleaning agent has found new use in the garage.


Researchers have found that a simple wash of citric acid can spruce 
up exhausted catalytic converters in diesel-powered cars, renewing 
their pollution-busting properties.


In diesel engines, catalytic converters contain a honeycomb of 
platinum that cleans up exhaust gases by turning poisonous carbon 
monoxide and unburned hydrocarbons into more benign carbon dioxide. 
This breaks down molecules that could contribute to smog.


But sulphur in the fuel and phosphorus from anti-wear oil additives 
can gum up a converter and prevent it from working. Researchers have 
tried various methods to clean them out in the past, mostly 
involving strong acids. But while these often do a good job of 
wiping away the gunk, they also tend to eat away at the valuable 
platinum.


Now scientists from the Institute of Catalysis and Petrochemistry in 
Madrid, Spain, have found that a dilute solution of citric acid can 
wash out the catalyst killers without damaging the platinum. When 
tested on a simulated stream of exhaust gases, the cleaned-up 
catalysts were as good as new, the team reports online in 
Environmental Science and Technology1.


Catalytic comeback

The citric acid - which was produced industrially rather than by 
squeezing lemons - removed up to 82% of the phosphorus and about 90% 
of the sulphur from a catalyst that had been used for 48,000 
kilometres of driving in a diesel-fuelled car. The wash cycle took 
six hours at 80 °C.


Removing sulphur and phosphorus in this way is a very positive 
step, says Richard Stobart, an automotive engineer at the 
University of Sussex in Brighton, UK.


The average vehicle runs for roughly 240,000 kilometres, and 
catalytic converters are supposed to last this course. But some 
researchers have claimed that up to 90% of catalysts fail before 
they reach 80,000 kilometres, says Stobart. Regenerating them 
periodically could help to reduce emission pollution, he adds.


Cars built in the United States already have on-board emissions 
monitoring, which should alert the driver when the catalyst starts 
to fail. Similar guidelines are expected to come into force in 
Europe within the next few years, says Stobart.


At present, many used catalytic converters are recycled to extract 
the expensive platinum metal, Stobart notes. But this 
energy-intensive process wastes the rest of the converter. 
Reactivation would be much more environmentally friendly, he says.


But it may be more expensive. Stobart says that the only people who 
would find it economically feasible to clean their converters would 
probably be those with fleets of diesel trucks that can each cover 2 
million kilometres in their lifetime. With more stringent emissions 
monitoring on the horizon, it would make good sense for these 
engines to get a regular spring clean. These are big, valuable 
devices, and replacing them can cost as much as replacing an 
engine, says Stobart.


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[Biofuel] Lemon juice chemical refreshes car exhaust

2005-05-05 Thread Ken Gotberg


http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050425/full/050425-10.html

Clean catalytic converters help to keep pollution down.

The age-old household tip that lemon juice makes for a great cleaning agent has 
found new use in the garage. 

Researchers have found that a simple wash of citric acid can spruce up 
exhausted catalytic converters in diesel-powered cars, renewing their 
pollution-busting properties.

In diesel engines, catalytic converters contain a honeycomb of platinum that 
cleans up exhaust gases by turning poisonous carbon monoxide and unburned 
hydrocarbons into more benign carbon dioxide. This breaks down molecules that 
could contribute to smog.

But sulphur in the fuel and phosphorus from anti-wear oil additives can gum up 
a converter and prevent it from working. Researchers have tried various methods 
to clean them out in the past, mostly involving strong acids. But while these 
often do a good job of wiping away the gunk, they also tend to eat away at the 
valuable platinum.

Now scientists from the Institute of Catalysis and Petrochemistry in Madrid, 
Spain, have found that a dilute solution of citric acid can wash out the 
catalyst killers without damaging the platinum. When tested on a simulated 
stream of exhaust gases, the cleaned-up catalysts were as good as new, the team 
reports online in Environmental Science and Technology1.

Catalytic comeback

The citric acid - which was produced industrially rather than by squeezing 
lemons - removed up to 82% of the phosphorus and about 90% of the sulphur from 
a catalyst that had been used for 48,000 kilometres of driving in a 
diesel-fuelled car. The wash cycle took six hours at 80 °C. 

Removing sulphur and phosphorus in this way is a very positive step, says 
Richard Stobart, an automotive engineer at the University of Sussex in 
Brighton, UK. 

The average vehicle runs for roughly 240,000 kilometres, and catalytic 
converters are supposed to last this course. But some researchers have claimed 
that up to 90% of catalysts fail before they reach 80,000 kilometres, says 
Stobart. Regenerating them periodically could help to reduce emission 
pollution, he adds.

Cars built in the United States already have on-board emissions monitoring, 
which should alert the driver when the catalyst starts to fail. Similar 
guidelines are expected to come into force in Europe within the next few years, 
says Stobart.

At present, many used catalytic converters are recycled to extract the 
expensive platinum metal, Stobart notes. But this energy-intensive process 
wastes the rest of the converter. Reactivation would be much more 
environmentally friendly, he says.

But it may be more expensive. Stobart says that the only people who would find 
it economically feasible to clean their converters would probably be those with 
fleets of diesel trucks that can each cover 2 million kilometres in their 
lifetime. With more stringent emissions monitoring on the horizon, it would 
make good sense for these engines to get a regular spring clean. These are 
big, valuable devices, and replacing them can cost as much as replacing an 
engine, says Stobart.




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