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Cleaner running, environmentally friendly auto engines and
gas turbines, as well as improved fuel efficiency--that is a
nice sounding combination.
Since its founding in 1986, Precision Combustion, Inc. (PCI),
New Haven, Connecticut, has focused on development and commercialization
of its proprietary, clean, and efficient combustion and air pollution
control technologies. The company reports it has invested in
excess of $10 million in research and development contracts obtained
from government and industrial customers in the development of
its products.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) monies from Lewis
Research Center were awarded in 1986 and 1990 to PCI. The research
proved the viability of efficient, cost-effective catalytic reduction
of gas turbine nitrogen oxide emissions along with fuel efficiency.
PCI's commercialization efforts are focused on two major product
lines, a catalytic combustor for gas turbines and a catalytic
converter for automotive applications.
The use of catalysts inside the combustion chamber allows
leaner combustion which reduces the formation of nitrogen oxides
while preserving the efficiency of advanced combustion turbine
designs. Gas turbine catalytic combustion technology offers emission
reductions and cost savings compared to more established low
emission technologies such as lean premixed combustion and selective
catalytic reduction in meeting gas turbine emissions regulations.
Early Lewis Research Center interest in PCI's abilities has
paid off handsomely. The company has developed an Advanced Technology
Catalytic Combustor (ATCC), and the Microlith, an automotive
catalytic converter. "These technologies would not have
been commercially feasible without the support of the NASA SBIR
program," says PCI president, Kevin Burns. "The follow-on
commercial support that was built directly on this early research
has enabled the company to grow substantially," Burns adds.
"Our catalysts inside the combustion chamber allow leaner
combustion, avoiding formation of nitrogen oxides while preserving
the efficiency of advanced combustion turbine designs,"
observes PCI chief scientist, William Pfefferle, the inventor
of the original catalytic combustor for gas turbines. "We
are integrating advanced catalytic technology with new combustor
designs. Ground power generation customers are going to like
this technology because it combines clean emissions with efficient
high firing temperatures along with stability, operability, and
reliability," Pfefferle concludes.
The combustor technology has potential application for aircraft
turbine engines, both for military and commercial markets. In
November 1996, a long-term business agreement to develop, manufacture,
and sell new catalytic combustor products for Westinghouse Power
Generation machines was announced. In a step toward broader industrial
commercialization of catalytic combustor technology, PCI was
awarded a $750,000 contract from the U.S. Department of Energy.
The work is geared to enable gas turbine manufacturers to meet
new and stricter environmental regulations.
| The development of the
Microlith automotive catalytic converter (left) for ultra-low
exhaust application turbine engines was advanced by a Lewis Research
Center Small Business Innovation converter Research contract.
Also developed were the stand-alone converter (right) and cartridge
(foreground). |
NASA's SBIR program has also supported another important catalytic
product under development at PCI. In 1994, Marshall Space Flight
Center began an SBIR program developing PCI's ultra-compact catalytic
converter for spacecraft life support. The company has been concurrently
developing this technology as a compact, lightweight, and high
efficiency catalytic converter for automobiles. Prototypes are
in test with major U.S. auto manufacturers. Recent testing of
the converter has demonstrated emissions reduction that exceeds
the new ultra-low emission vehicle standards of the day. The
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is providing PCI ongoing
commercialization support for its converter. PCI has been selected
as one of only five small businesses included in an EPA effort,
the Environmental Technologies Initiative Program. PCI is currently
exploring strategic alliances for scaling up production and developing
a pilot manufacturing plant.
PCI anticipates its current growth and financing efforts will
enable it to become a highly value-added, fully-integrated manufacturing
company, providing core catalytic components and products for
a range of clean combustion market opportunities. Other products
in the development pipeline include a durable catalytic grow
plug for diesel and gas turbine engines, and hybrid electric
vehicle and fuel cell components, which provide a long-term stream
of proprietary technology products fueling future company growth.

| Dr.
Paul Menacherry, a PCI research and development engineer, is
working with a custom-built test rig used to simulate automotive
exhaust gas. |
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