To meet the new clean diesel standards, Ford and GM are using a NOx scrubbing
process called urea selective catalytic reduction in their 2011-2012 model year
heavy-duty pickup trucks.
The new 2010-2011-2012 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.
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.