1) Purpose of ammonia injection in SCR
Selective catalytic reduction reduces NOx by reacting it with NH3 over a catalyst to form nitrogen and water. Dosing must track exhaust flow and inlet NOx, while preventing excess NH3 slip. This calculator converts your operating point into a required NH3 mass rate and an optional reagent solution flow for design work.
2) Typical input data ranges used in field checks
For many stationary and mobile duty cycles, normalized exhaust flow can range from 500 to 10,000 Nm3/h. Inlet NOx often falls between 100 and 1,200 ppmv (or equivalent mg/Nm3). Targets commonly specify 70% to 95% reduction or an outlet limit such as 50 to 150 ppmv, depending on permits and catalyst condition.
3) Factors that influence required NH3
The stoichiometric coefficient reflects NO/NO2 chemistry and how NOx is reported (frequently NO2‑equivalent). The NH3/NOx ratio captures control strategy, while utilization accounts for mixing, distribution, and catalyst effectiveness. Many commissioning teams begin with utilization of 0.85 to 0.95 and apply a 2% to 10% safety margin to cover sensor drift and transient operation.
4) Using outputs for pump, line, and nozzle sizing
The solution flow in L/h and injection rate in mL/min help select a metering pump and confirm turndown. For mid-load operation, DEF injection often falls near 3 to 8 L/h. Verify the minimum stable pump flow against low‑load operation, and confirm line velocities avoid crystallization when using urea solutions. For aqueous ammonia, check material compatibility and ventilation.
5) Engineering checks before issuing a dosing setpoint
Confirm the same reference conditions are used for flow and concentration, and validate NOx basis and molecular weight. Compare predicted outlet NOx with recent test data and catalyst age. Finally, document assumptions, densities, and safety factors using the CSV or PDF export so calculations remain traceable.