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  2. Diesel particulate filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diesel_particulate_filter

    DPF filters go through a regeneration process which removes this soot and lowers the filter pressure. There are three types of regeneration: passive, active, and forced. Passive regeneration takes place normally while driving, when engine load and vehicle drive-cycle create temperatures that are high enough to regenerate the soot buildup on the ...

  3. Exhaust gas recirculation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exhaust_gas_recirculation

    For this reason, after repeated regeneration events, eventually the DPF must either be physically removed and cleaned in a special external process, or it must be replaced. As noted earlier, the feeding of the low-oxygen exhaust gas into the diesel engine's air intake engenders lower combustion temperatures, thereby reducing emissions of NO x .

  4. Selective catalytic reduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selective_catalytic_reduction

    DPR is a diesel particulate filtration system with regeneration process that uses late fuel injection to control exhaust temperature to burn off soot. [12] [13] Diesel engines manufactured after January 1, 2010 are required to meet lowered NOx standards for the US market.

  5. Secondary air injection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_air_injection

    Pumped air injection systems use a vane pump called the air pump, AIR pump, or colloquially "smog pump" turned by the engine via a belt or electric motor.The pump's air intake is filtered by a rotating screen or the vehicle air filter to exclude dirt particles large enough to damage the system.

  6. Normalized frequency (signal processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normalized_frequency...

    In digital signal processing (DSP), a normalized frequency is a ratio of a variable frequency and a constant frequency associated with a system (such as a sampling rate, ). Some software applications require normalized inputs and produce normalized outputs, which can be re-scaled to physical units when necessary.

  7. Regenerative circuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regenerative_circuit

    The type 36 screen-grid tube (obsolete since the mid-1930s) had a non-regenerative detection gain (audio frequency plate voltage divided by radio frequency input voltage) of only 9.2 at 7.2 MHz, but in a regenerative detector, had detection gain as high as 7,900 at critical regeneration (non-oscillating) and as high as 15,800 with regeneration ...

  8. Log trigger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_trigger

    In relational databases, the log trigger or history trigger is a mechanism for automatic recording of information about changes inserting or/and updating or/and deleting rows in a database table. It is a particular technique for change data capturing, and in data warehousing for dealing with slowly changing dimensions.

  9. Regenerative cooling (rocketry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regenerative_cooling...

    Cut-away of the ORM-50 engine, cooling jacket on the nozzle is visible. In 1857 Carl Wilhelm Siemens introduced the concept of regenerative cooling. [1] On 10 May 1898, James Dewar used regenerative cooling to become the first to statically liquefy hydrogen. [2]