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January 27, 2008 Gainesville Times (GA)
By Stephen GurrAmerican Le Mans Series, EPA devise an eco-friendly rideBy requiring its competitors to choose between clean diesel, E10 (a 10 percent ethanol, 90 percent gasoline blend) or E85 (85 percent ethanol), ALMS hopes to...
January 25, 2008 The Times
UNION CITY, Ind. - A Department of Education committee will vote Friday on proposed safety standards that could allow hybrid diesel school buses on Indiana roads.A prototype was developed by Productive Concepts Inc., a...
January 24, 2008 KCCI.com
NEVADA, Iowa -- Two Iowa school districts are part of a nationwide experiment that could save Iowa schools hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.Sigourney and Nevada are testing two of the 19 new hybrid school buses running...
January 23, 2008 Des Moines Register
By Jacqueline Lee"A diesel bus is loud, and if you had one here today, you would also smell the difference," said the association's Margaret Buckton.The buses went into service Jan. 3 as part of an 11-state effort led...
January 23, 2008 WTOP-FM
By Mark SeagravesWASHINGTON - Metro will buy 452 hybrid buses from General Motors, with an option for 500 more.The hybrid order from the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority is one of the largest GM has ever had. GM...
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Technology Spotlight
The diesel industry is constantly evolving. Through aggressive research and development, advanced clean diesel technologies are changing the way these engines, fuels and aftertreatment systems work.
This spotlight on the latest in advanced diesel technology provides insights into the revolutionary innovations being designed and tested by industry groups for ever greater power, efficiency and environmental progress.
Cummins DOC+CCV Receives EPA Verfication
An emission control system developed by Cummins Emission Solutions & Cummins Filtration has been verified under the US EPA Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) program. The system consists of a precious metal diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) and a closed crankcase ventilation (CCV) system (coalescer breather and crankcase depression regulator valve).
The system is applicable to heavy-duty highway engines using ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel. After aging, the system reduced PM emissions by 30%, HCs by 68%, and CO by 60%. Read more.
Mercedes Bionic Combines Diesel Power With Aquatic Design
Featured in Popular Science Magazine among the next generation of high-efficiency small cars, the Mercedes-Benz Bionic Car moves like a fish in water. The shape of the aerodynamic concept car is aquatically inspired and resembles a tropical boxfish. Despite its cube-shaped form, the streamlined profile and lightweight construction create the conditions for an incredibly low fuel consumption of 70 miles per gallon.
Equipped with a 2.0-liter, four-cylinder, direct-injection turbodiesel engine, the Bionic reaches 62 mph in 8.2 seconds, while making 140 hp and 221 lbs-ft of torque. The engine is clean enough to meet current Euro 5 exhaust emission standards and a Selective Catalytic Reduction system allows for nitrogen oxide emission reductions of up to 80 percent.
Army Recycling Diesel Exhaust into Drinking Water
March 2007
Using modified Humvees, the U.S. Army is field testing a system that converts diesel exhaust into clean drinking water. Through a complex series of filters and chemical processes, the diesel exhaust is recirculated through a separate tank and broken down into water vapor. Though the technology is only being used in a few vehicles, the Army expects the concept to provide an additional tactical advantage on the battlefield, aiding in troop survivability. Read the feature story in Popular Science.
MTU Launches Cleaner Power Solution: New Generation Of Series 4000 Engines Meet Stricter Emissions Rules
via Lloyd's List By Hugh O'Mahony
MTU Friedrichshafen has unveiled a new generation of its Series 4000 high speed marine diesel engines that are cleaner and more powerful than their predecessors.
The new units meet the demands of US Environmental Protection Agency Tier 2 emission specifications, which prescribe a significant reduction in nitrogen oxide.
The manufacturer said its new marine units undercut the NOX-limit of 7.2 g/kWh by employing purely internal engine technology without any exhaust aftertreatment.
The new combustion balance also achieved a significant decrease in particulate emissions.
The Series 4000 marine diesel engines produce power of up to 4.300 kW.
"Because compliance with exhaust emission specifications has been achieved without exhaust aftertreatment and the additional sub-assemblies that go with it, the new engine will fit the same footprint as its predecessor."
MTU executive vice-president, engineering and operations, Gerd-Michael Wolters, said: "MTU Friedrichshafen was the first manufacturer of large diesel engines to use common rail injection technology.
MTU said it has also achieved technological progress on the turbocharging front: its Series 4000 marine engines are fitted with two (12 and 16-cylinder versions) or four (20-cylinder version) of the turbochargers developed and manufactured by MTU in-house.
The TCs can be switched in line with engine speed and the single-stage sequential charging system ensures optimum performance across the whole engine performance map.
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