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Engine Oil Additive Effects on the Deterioration of a Stoichiometric Emissions Control (C-4) System

27

Citations

10

References

1979

Year

Abstract

<div class="htmlview paragraph">Phosphorus, originating from the commonly used engine oil additive zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDP), contributed to the deterioration in the performance of a stoichiometric emissions control system. Data obtained from a series of 200-hour engine-dynamometer tests suggest two separate means for phosphorus-induced system deterioration: reduced CO, NO<sub>x</sub>, and HC conversion efficiencies due to catalyst poisoning; increased oxygen sensor rich-to-lean response time and altered oxygen sensor output voltage due to sensor contamination. The presence of an alkaline metal detergent in the ZDP-containing engine oil resulted in less deterioration of converter HC efficiency, but had no effect on the other system performance parameters.</div>

References

YearCitations

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