Originally Posted by
DMSentra Bingo!! Under WOT the EGR system shouldn't be functioning. If it is you need a proper tune to remedy the situation. But, EGR gas is inert, non-burnable since is exhaust. Unless you have something seriously wrong with the tune of your engine there should be no way EGR can alter the mixture. The way EGR works is by displacing some of the incoming proper mixture with an inert gas.
What I had mistakenly believed was that the fuel injection system was not affected directly by EGR controls. Thus, fuel would be set to inject based on
metered and fresh air coming through the intake (not taking into account the recirculated air, which has very little oxygen remaining). Therefore, when the low oxygen exhaust gases replaced fresh charge, the fuel would be overkill due to the overall oxygen difference in the charge between what the ECU assumed it to be based on MAF output etc and what it really was because of the recirculated gas.
Anyways, I'm assuming now I was wrong to believe this, and that the fuel input
is actually adjusted based on EGR to maintain the right A/F ratio for the
actual amount of oxygen present. Is this right? I have never really looked at an EGR system in depth before and I don't really know how it interfaces with the car other than recirculating.
Originally Posted by
Fastspec2 The concept of egr is primarily to keep egt temps down during cruise and thus keeping nox from beeing formed. Nox turns into the nasty brown crap called smog when it goes through a chemical reaction with the air and sunlight. A side effect, if you want to call it that, is that by introducing an inert gas into the chamber some space is taken up that would be filled buy a stoich air/fuel charge. You may be able to debate the recouping of some unburned fuel in the exhaust streem, but if its that rich you have many other issues to work out. Another way egr improves mileage, is by reducing cyl temps, more spark lead can be used during cruise. Also, vacuum in the intake manifold creates a pumping loss, as the cyl comes down it has to overcome the pressure drop across the piston, the piston has to fight the vacuum it creates. Buy partially filling the cyl with egr, the vac drops, the pumping loss falls, and economy improves. Way back when criuse vacuum was used to help asses fuel economy, the more the merrier. Anyone remember those old vac gauges from jcwhitney that had the sticker over the numbers that told you fuel economy? (for those of you that don't know, jcwhitney was like THE ssautochrome back in the days of paper and pre internet) In fact many newer vehicles with variable cam timeing and drive by wire (I.E. the triton v-8 ford, cadilac v-6, and some bmw's) will retard the cams so much at cruise that the engine requires close to wot to maintain speed, this drops inlet vac and drops all the pumping losses. Basiccaly you detune the engine so its ve is very low and only makes the power (and therefore only burns the fuel) you need to cruise.
Right, so from my understanding, the presence of recirculated exhaust gas is to act as an extra reservoir for heat during combustion, thus bringing down the flame/overall temperature. Since NOx production increases with temperature, this process reduces the overall NOx production. I am thinking this is what you and others have just said
.
I actually never thought about the pumping effect by EGR. Makes prefect sense now that you have mentioned it though, it's a cool idea.
As far as running rich, I never meant to say there was actual fuel leftover to be recirculated.. was referring to how it decomposes into hydrogen and CO, etc.. More what I meant was that not
all of the exhaust species are in fact inert in the next burn.
You really seem to know the EGR well though.
My previous (and apparently somewhat wrong) post was simply speculation.