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Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) information

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Old 01-02-2010, 07:09 AM
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Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) information

Hot off the press from pickuptrucks.com:



Welcome to 2010! Got Urea?

Posted by Mike Levine | January 1, 2010

Welcome to 2010! We'd like to wish all of our readers a happy and prosperous new year from the entire team at PickupTrucks.com.
Of course, we'd also like to remind you that tough EPA emissions regulations for all new diesel engines take effect today that mandate the reduction of nitrogen oxide levels by 90 percent from 2007 and by 96 percent from 1994.
NOx is a major air pollutant that contributes to smog, asthma, and respiratory and heart diseases. It's a byproduct of diesel’s high combustion temperatures, which results from the high frictional heat levels created by compressing air in the cylinders to the point where it can ignite diesel fuel without using a spark.
To meet the new clean diesel standards, Ford and GM are using a NOx scrubbing process called urea selective catalytic reduction in their 2011 model year heavy-duty pickup trucks.
The new 2010 Ram Heavy Duty 2500 and 3500 pickup trucks carry over the same urea-free NOx reduction system that debuted in the 2007 Dodge Ram HD pickups though the Ram 3500, 4500 and 5500 cab chassis trucks will use urea SCR.
Urea is the same organic compound found in urine, which has forced drivers (at least most drivers) to pause for bio-breaks ever since the car was invented. It turns out that urea, which is being sold under the more marketable name “Diesel Exhaust Fluid” for about $2.50 a gallon, is also a chemically efficient way to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions produced by diesel engines.

DEF (32.5 percent industrial urea and 67.5 percent deionized water) is held in a separate storage tank and injected as a fine mist into the hot exhaust gases. The heat turns the urea into ammonia that - when combined with a special catalytic converter - breaks down the NOx into harmless nitrogen gas and water vapor.
Far be it from us to question the quality of your urea, but if you suspect an issue with purity there's at least one tool available to help check it before you pour it in your DEF tank. Atago makes a handheld DEF digital refractometer that can measure the quality of a batch of urea using just a few drops of the fluid. It costs approximately $300.
If you're looking for DEF, check your local Pilot truck stop for a pump or you can order it online at NAPA auto parts.
For more information about DEF, please read our earlier story.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 07:41 AM
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Great find Scott! I saw that this morning and was going to post it. Reps sent!
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 07:46 AM
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Glad to hear that at least NAPA is ready for it..I would assume Gallon container, so I would be adviseable for anyone to have a couple Gallons on hand while traveling for quite sometime.

Shelf life would need to be taken into consideration.

Thanks for the reps!
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 07:50 AM
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Originally Posted by senix
Glad to hear that at least NAPA is ready for it..I would assume Gallon container, so I would be adviseable for anyone to have a couple Gallons on hand while traveling for quite sometime.

Shelf life would need to be taken into consideration.

Thanks for the reps!

Great point about having a couple of gallons extra. I agree and until this stuff becomes widely available, I would definitely keep extra on hand while traveling. Hopefully most truckstops will have it on the shelves pretty soon.

No problem on the reps....you deserve more than you get.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 08:25 AM
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Dumbo question:

If you are in a pinch, and there is no DEF on hand, is there any way the Ford sensor system can tell that you filled the tank with De-ionized water?

Be careful --- in cold climates, this may freeze sooner than the DEF.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 09:35 AM
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yes, there are sensors that would indicate it. Truck would shut down is my understanding.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 11:05 AM
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Originally Posted by senix
yes, there are sensors that would indicate it. Truck would shut down is my understanding.
I can't say for sure on light trucks. I sell Mack, Volvo & International trucks for a living and no Heavy Trucks will shut down due to lack of DEF (obviously, International is going another route with Advanced EGR, so this doesn't apply to them).

They'll be progressive warning lights and chimes making it as idiot proof as possible. Last stage will be speed restriction to 5 mph to move truck off the road and such. Since DEF usage will be 2-3 % of diesel consumption, a 5 gallon "spare" jug in a truck will be plenty. For a pick-up, I would think a quart should be more than enough to carry as extra.

If you use any other fluid other than the DEF manufactured to the exact ISO standard, the fluid will not decompose into a gas, thus failing to make the chemical reaction required to convert NOx into harmless nitrogen. There's a NOx sensor before and after the SCR can and a simple comparison by the control module will determine if the NOx is being nuked.

So you can add any fluid you want in the DEF tank, but you ain't going very far, very fast.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 11:17 AM
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I think what will happen besides the warnings and limp mode is that once you have gotten that far and you shut the motor off I am think it will not restart till fluid is added.

I read that somewhere or something to that effect. If I find it again I will post it.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 11:29 AM
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Here is the Dodge way of doing this....I would think that Ford will be similar although I have not read any real firm info on it:

Chrysler Diesel Exhaust Fluid System Previews NOx Reduction Solutions for 2010
Posted by Mike Levine | March 9, 2009


It’s been said that heavy-duty pickup truck owners who haul and tow frequently have diesel running through their veins. They crave diesel’s high torque at low rpms and extended driving range between fill-ups. Soon, many will have to think about making pitstops for another fluid: urea.

Urea is the same organic compound found in urine, which has forced drivers (at least most drivers) to pause for bio-breaks ever since the car was invented. It turns out that urea, which is being sold under the more marketable name “diesel exhaust fluid,” is also a chemically efficient way to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions produced by diesel engines.

NOx is a major air pollutant that contributes to smog, asthma, and respiratory and heart diseases. It's a byproduct of diesel’s high combustion temperatures, which results from the high frictional heat levels created by compressing air in the cylinders to the point where it can ignite diesel fuel without using a spark. This is unlike a gas engine, which uses spark ignition to burn petrol.

Come 2010, all new diesel-powered pickups will have to meet tougher federal diesel emission standards that will reduce allowable nitrogen oxide levels by 90 percent from today and by 96 percent from 1994.

The so-called Tier 2 Bin 5 regulations also mandated the use of diesel particulate filters and ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel to cut soot emissions by 90 percent in 2007 from 2006 levels. At 15 parts per million, ULSD contains 97 percent less sulfur than the 500 ppm low sulfur diesel it replaced.



There are three ways to lower NOx emissions in diesels: The first is exhaust gas recirculation. EGR recirculates a portion of the engine's exhaust back into the engine at a lower temperature. The cooled gases have a higher heat capacity and contain less oxygen than air, lowering combustion temperatures and reducing the formation of NOx. EGR is prevalent in today’s clean diesel engines to reduce NOx, but it’s not efficient enough in current form to meet 2010 emissions levels.

Navistar is the only diesel engine manufacturer that says it will use in-cylinder EGR only to reduce NOx next year, but it will be limited to large over-the-road truck applications and not HD pickups and chassis cabs.

The second way is the use of EGR plus a special “adsorber” catalyst material to soak up and break down remaining NOx molecules before they leave the tailpipe. Chrysler is the only heavy-duty pickup manufacturer in the segment to use this approach in its Dodge Ram 2500 and 3500 trucks. The current 2007-09 6.7-liter Cummins six-cylinder diesel powertrain reached 2010 NOx emissions requirements three years early; it will carryover into 2010 and beyond without change in these models while Ford and GM are expected to update their next-generation diesel engines for 2010 using the last technology, below.

The third, and newest, approach is selective catalytic reduction using DEF. The urea-based solution (32.5 percent industrial urea and 67.5 percent deionized water) is held in a separate storage tank and injected as a fine mist into the hot exhaust gases. The heat turns the urea into ammonia that - when combined with a special catalytic converter - breaks down the NOx into harmless nitrogen gas and water vapor.

Like Ford and GM, Chrysler will use diesel exhaust fluid to scrub NOx from the exhaust but only in its new 2010 Dodge Ram 3500, 4500 and 5500 commercial Chassis Cabs.

The Dodge Ram Chassis Cabs use the same Cummins 6.7-liter diesel as the 2500 and 3500 pickups.

You might be wondering why Chrysler is using a NOx adsorber on its HD pickups and urea SCR on its Chassis Cabs. It’s because the NOx adsorber depends on rare earth metals. Until recently, the prices of these metals had been sky high. DEF is much cheaper than rhodium or palladium. The drawback against urea though is it requires periodic maintenance and driver action.



For demonstration purposes, Chrysler had a specially labeled Ram Chassis Cab on the floor at the 2009 Work Truck Show in Chicago to show off its new urea SCR components.

“The 2010 [Ram] Chassis Cabs start with an eight-gallon tank to hold urea,” said Kevin Mets, senior development manager for Dodge trucks. “The eight gallons gives us a good range [approximately 4,000 miles] even though the entire package [DEF plus SCR hardware] weighs about 200 pounds. We don’t rob as much payload capacity as a tank that, say, has a capacity of 16 gallons.”

DEF is expected to cost about $2.75 a gallon when pumped at truck stops and other retailers, according to the North American SCR Stakeholders Group, an ad-hoc industry alliance of truck and engine manufacturers, regulatory agencies and associations, and DEF infrastructure partners and suppliers. It will be packaged in many ways including 2.5 gallon jugs, bulk storage and DEF dispensing units.

Chrysler has located the DEF-fill port on the same side of the truck as the diesel-tank door.

“We put the urea-fill neck on the same side as the fuel neck,” Mets said. “When a guy is at the fuel station, he fills up and can do the urea [simultaneously] so his time into both is the same.”



DEF lines run from the DEF tank to DEF injectors that squirt the urea-water mix into the exhaust stream, behind the diesel particulate trap. There the DEF solution decomposes into ammonia, which mixes with the nitrogen oxide to break down into nitrogen and water. It also cools extremely hot gases exiting the DPF, which acts like a self-cleaning oven during its regeneration process to incinerate trapped soot to begin the soot-trapping cycle again. Coolant lines near the DEF injectors ensure they run at the optimal temperature for the ideal chemical reaction.

DEF starts to freeze around 11 degrees, so heating lines are necessary to keep the fluid warm in very cold weather.

“It kind of goes from a liquid to a slush, like Jell-O, though it would take a long time to freeze an eight-gallon tank,” Mets said.

Heating lines, which use engine coolant, run through the DEF reservoir to warm it up when sensors in the tank determine DEF temperatures are too low.

It may take a long time for the engine to warm up in very cold conditions with sufficient extra-heat capacity to warm the DEF heating lines, especially if the truck is being used over short distances or idling. In that case, combustion temps will also be lower, reducing the amount of NOx created and requiring less or no DEF to clean the exhaust.

DEF fluid may need to be replaced in hot climates where a truck sees little to no use for extended periods. DEF slowly converts to ammonia around 120 degrees, and the process accelerates as temperatures rise.

Of key interest is what happens if the DEF tank runs dry? Chrysler says it will provide plenty of warning to drivers before the truck is prevented from restarting without a urea supply.



“It’s all mileage based,” Mets said. “The [electronic vehicle information center] will show a low-urea/fill-urea warning when there’s a 1,000-mile range left to go. As the driver gets closer [to zero] then the inducement strategy kicks in.”

That inducement strategy includes more frequent use of the low-DEF warning light, chimes that provide auditory warnings and a countdown of how many miles are left until the DEF tank is empty and the truck is immobilized.

“If the countdown goes to zero, then the next stop the driver makes and turns that vehicle off, then goes to restart, he’ll get a ‘vehicle will not restart’ message,” Mets said. “There’s plenty of warning. We’ve got a 52-gallon [diesel fuel tank], which has a range of about 600 miles or less. Eventually he’s got to fill the fuel tank back up, so he has to get off the road and make that stop, and he has to do it at a fueling station that will have a urea system there. It’s all part of the strategy.”

For those thinking of ways to defeat the DEF fluid-level system, don’t. Sensors can determine the composition of the DEF added to the truck, so substitutes like pure water or (ahem) pee can’t be used. The truck will know. It will also detect if you try to mix agricultural-grade urea and demineralized water to brew a homemade batch of DEF.

One concern we had when we saw the demo setup was the placement of the DEF tank below the crew cab, where it rode next to and below the frame rails. Mets said that was the best place to put the DEF reservoir on the truck, so it was out of the way of aftermarket upfitters adding purpose-built job hardware to the trucks. He also said Chrysler engineered the tank to have minimal impact on the truck’s breakover angle for offroad use, and it’s protected off-road by the frame.

Come Jan. 1, 2010, most new diesel pickup truck buyers are going to have to go with the flow when it comes to dealing with urea for clean emissions.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 11:49 AM
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Originally Posted by senix
I think what will happen besides the warnings and limp mode is that once you have gotten that far and you shut the motor off I am think it will not restart till fluid is added.

I read that somewhere or something to that effect. If I find it again I will post it.
That's basically the last stage in commercial trucks. If your DEF tank is empty and you add fuel without adding DEF, that's when you're limited to 5 mph. The thought is all the warning lights and chimes have been going off for some time and eventually you need to add fuel. Doing so and ignoring DEF level brings you to a crawl.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 02:44 PM
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Originally Posted by senix
Sensors can determine the composition of the DEF added to the truck, so substitutes like pure water or (ahem) pee can’t be used. The truck will know. It will also detect if you try to mix agricultural-grade urea and demineralized water to brew a homemade batch of DEF.


Urea is urea.

There are degrees of purity, but the MSD of DEF will disclose exactly what is inside it.

Once that is known, it is a relatively simple proposition to mix "home brew" providing you have the ingredients in the requisite purity.

There may be some twists in the commercial fluid, including additives to lower freezing point, dispersants, etc. but it is not rocket science to figure it out.


The thing about the truck's on board sensors being able to tell the difference with a properly mixed "aftermarket" brew is a sad joke.
 
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Old 01-02-2010, 02:45 PM
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Originally Posted by I'mAllIn
That's basically the last stage in commercial trucks. If your DEF tank is empty and you add fuel without adding DEF, that's when you're limited to 5 mph. The thought is all the warning lights and chimes have been going off for some time and eventually you need to add fuel. Doing so and ignoring DEF level brings you to a crawl.

Right.

Presumably this system never fails or gives a false alarm.


This reeks of the seat belt ignition interlock of past where if your belt is not buckled, the car will not start.


Intrusive minders at their worse.
 
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Old 02-26-2010, 05:54 PM
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I wonder if the truck 32% is the same as UAN32% we use as fertilizer for a lot cheaper per ton ($220 per ton per my supplier).
 
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Old 02-27-2010, 09:53 AM
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A few truckstops on I-15 already carry the AdBlue stuff for Mercedes. Mostly in CA, but I did see a few in NV and one in UT.
 
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Old 02-27-2010, 11:40 AM
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Here is a link for Pilot Travel Centers for all there places that are carrying it already:
https://www.pilottravelcenters.com/L...ust+Fluid+(DEF)

Seems they are getting on board alot quicker than with the ULSD did.
 


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