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catalytic converter

Using Catalytic Converters for Industrial Waste Gas: What Actually Works


People usually think catalytic converters are just for cars and trucks. Makes sense. That's where most of them end up. But over the years, I've sold substrates to all kinds of industrial customers. There's a whole other world out there.

Factories. Chemical plants. Paint booths. Printing presses. Anywhere a process gives off volatile organic compounds—VOCs—or carbon monoxide or other nasty stuff. They have to clean up their exhaust too. And a catalytic converter is often the best tool for the job.

But here's the thing. Industrial waste gas is not engine exhaust. You can't just grab a converter off the shelf and bolt it onto a stack.


How Industrial Exhaust Is Different

Engine exhaust comes out hot. 300, 400, 500 degrees. Industrial exhaust might be 100 degrees. Or 50. Or room temperature.

Engine exhaust has a pretty consistent makeup. Industrial exhaust can be anything. Solvent vapors. Methane from a landfill. Styrene from a fiberglass plant. Stuff you don't want to breathe.

Engine exhaust flows steady. Industrial exhaust can be batch. Big surge when an oven door opens, then nothing. That changes how you size the catalyst.

So yeah. You have to design for the specific process. No shortcuts.


What Actually Gets Treated

VOCs are the most common thing. Paint solvents. Printing inks. Dry cleaning fluid. Gasoline vapors. Those are hydrocarbons. They oxidize just like unburned fuel in an engine. CO2 and water.

Carbon monoxide shows up too. Same deal. Oxidize it.

Odors. Paper mills. Food processing. Rendering plants. The smell is usually organic compounds. A catalytic converter knocks it down.

Hazardous air pollutants. Formaldehyde. Benzene. Ethylene oxide. Same chemistry. Heat plus catalyst equals less harmful stuff.


The Typical Setup

In an industrial application, the converter is part of a system.

First, you might need to preheat the gas. Cold exhaust won't light off the catalyst. So you put a burner or a heat exchanger in front.

Second, you need clean gas. No dust. No liquid droplets. No stuff that will coat and poison the catalyst. So filters or scrubbers go upstream.

Then the gas goes through the catalyst. Same honeycomb substrate as an engine converter. Same washcoat. Same precious metals. Just bigger.

After that, the gas is clean. Hot, but clean. Sometimes you run it through a heat exchanger to recover that heat. That helps pay for the system over time.


What Substrate Works

For industrial jobs, we use the same metal honeycomb we make for engines. Just bigger.

Cell density is different. Engines use 400 cpsi typically. Industrial sometimes goes lower. 200 cpsi. 100 cpsi. Because the gas might be dirty. Bigger cells don't plug as easy.

Material matters. Industrial exhaust can be corrosive. Acid gases. Chlorine. Sulfur. Aluminum hates that. Stainless does better. For really nasty stuff, we use special alloys.

Thermal cycling is a thing. Industrial processes start and stop. The converter heats up, cools down, heats up. That's hard on brazing. We use high-temp brazing, same as for diesel DOC applications.


The Precious Metal Question

What catalyst do you use? Depends on what you're trying to oxidize.

Platinum and palladium work for most hydrocarbons. That's what's in a standard automotive converter.

Methane is different. Landfill gas. Natural gas engines. Methane is hard to oxidize. Needs more heat. Needs a different catalyst.

Halogenated compounds—stuff with chlorine or fluorine—can poison standard catalysts. There are special formulations that resist that.

We've learned to ask a lot of questions. What's in the exhaust? What temperature? What flow rate? Duty cycle? Without that, we're guessing. Guessing doesn't work.


What Goes Wrong

I've seen industrial converters fail in ways that don't happen on vehicles.

Poisoning is the big one. Something in the exhaust coats the catalyst and kills it. Silicon from paint overspray. Phosphorus from some chemicals. Sulfur from certain fuels. Once it's poisoned, it's done. Can't wash it off.

Plugging is another. Dust builds up in the cells. The catalyst is still active, but gas can't get through. Backpressure builds. The fan can't push enough air. The process shuts down.

Thermal damage happens. A surge in temperature can melt the substrate. Or the precious metals sinter—clump together and lose surface area.

Physical damage is less common but happens. Vibration. Bad mounting. The substrate breaks loose inside the can.

We've seen all of these. Usually it's something upstream that caused it. The converter is just the first thing to show symptoms.


A Job I Remember

A printing plant a few years back. Web press running solvent-based inks. Solvent vapors going up a stack. Neighbors complaining about the smell.

They tried a thermal oxidizer. Burned the solvents with a flame. Worked fine. But it used a ton of natural gas. Fuel bill was killing them.

We put in a catalytic converter system. Preheater to get the gas up to 250 degrees. Metal honeycomb with platinum-palladium coating. The catalyst oxidized the solvents at much lower temperature than the thermal oxidizer. Fuel consumption dropped 70 percent.

System paid for itself in 18 months. Neighbors stopped complaining. Plant manager was happy.

That's the kind of job that makes sense. Clean up the exhaust and save money at the same time.


When It Doesn't Make Sense

Catalytic converters aren't always the answer.

If the exhaust is really dirty—lots of dust, lots of liquids—you'll spend more on filters and pre-treatment than the converter is worth. A thermal oxidizer might be simpler. Burn everything. Don't worry about poisoning.

If the flow is high and the concentration is low, heat recovery might not work. You spend more energy heating the gas than you save. A different technology—carbon adsorption, biofiltration—might be better.

If the temperature is too low—below 200 degrees—you have to add a lot of heat. That costs money. At some point, a different method is cheaper.

We tell customers this. Not every job is right for a catalytic converter. I'd rather lose a sale than sell something that doesn't work.


What to Look For

If you're buying an industrial catalytic converter, here's what I'd check.

Substrate material. Stainless for corrosive gases. Aluminum for clean, dry applications.

Cell density. Lower for dirty gas. Higher for clean gas. Ask about pressure drop.

Catalyst formulation. Platinum-palladium for most hydrocarbons. Special for methane or halogenated compounds.

Pre-treatment. Filters? Scrubbers? Heat exchanger? Make sure the gas is clean and hot enough before it hits the catalyst.

Monitoring. Temperature sensors. Pressure sensors. Gas analyzers before and after. You need to know when the catalyst is losing activity.

Replacement plan. Industrial catalysts don't last forever. They poison slowly. They sinter slowly. Have a plan to swap them out every few years.


Bottom Line

Catalytic converters aren't just for cars. They're for any process that gives off organic vapors or carbon monoxide. Factories. Chemical plants. Paint booths. Printing presses. Landfills.

Same basic technology. Metal honeycomb substrate. Precious metal coating. Exhaust flows through, gets oxidized, comes out cleaner.

But the details are different. Cell density. Material. Catalyst formulation. Pre-treatment. Industrial exhaust is not engine exhaust. You have to design for the specific process.

When it works, it works well. Low operating cost. Good destruction efficiency. Heat recovery can pay for the system.

When it doesn't, it's usually because someone skipped the engineering. Didn't ask about the gas composition. Didn't pre-treat the dust. Didn't preheat enough.

Ask the right questions up front. Get the right design. And the converter will run for years. I've seen it happen.

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waveguide window

Waveguide Array Ventilation Solutions for High-Power Server Cabinets


I've been in enough data centers to know that high-power server cabinets are a different animal. The gear inside is pushing hundreds of watts per square foot. The fans are screaming. The heat coming off the back is enough to warm a small office.

And the EMI? Forget about it. All those processors, all those high-speed interconnects, all that switching power—it's a radio nightmare.

Most people think about cooling first. Then they think about shielding later. Or they don't think about shielding at all. That's backwards. In a high-power server cabinet, you need both from the start.


The Problem With Just Cutting Holes

Here's what I see all the time. Someone builds a server cabinet. They put in high-power gear. They cut holes in the back door for airflow. Maybe they slap some wire mesh over it to keep fingers out.

Works great for cooling. Terrible for EMI.

That mesh does almost nothing at the frequencies modern servers put out. 10-gig networking. High-speed memory buses. Switching power supplies. All that RF goes right through the holes and broadcasts to everything nearby.

I've walked through data centers with a spectrum analyzer and watched the noise floor jump every time I passed a cabinet with open vents. The gear inside those cabinets? It's getting interference too. Not enough to crash, maybe. But enough to cause retransmits. Enough to slow things down. Enough to make you wonder why your network seems flaky sometimes.


What a Waveguide Array Does

A waveguide array vent is basically a piece of honeycomb. But it's designed specifically to let air through while blocking RF.

The principle is called waveguide below cutoff. The cells are sized so that electromagnetic waves above a certain frequency can't propagate through. They hit the cell walls, bounce around, and lose their energy before they make it out the other side.

Air molecules don't care about cutoff frequency. They go right through.

For high-power server cabinets, we typically use cells around 1/8 inch. That blocks frequencies up into the gigahertz range. For higher frequencies—like what you see with 25-gig or 100-gig networking—you might need smaller cells.

The depth matters too. Deeper cells give more attenuation. But deeper cells also restrict airflow more. So there's a trade-off. For most server cabinets, half-inch depth is the sweet spot. Good shielding. Good airflow.


The Heat Problem

High-power servers put out a lot of heat. I'm talking cabinets pulling 10, 15, sometimes 20 kilowatts. That heat has to go somewhere. If it doesn't, the gear cooks. Lifespan drops. Performance tanks.

A waveguide array vent has to move enough air to keep that gear cool. That means open area matters.

A good waveguide vent runs 80 to 90 percent open area. That's almost as much as an open hole. The honeycomb structure doesn't block much airflow. But the open area number alone doesn't tell the whole story. The cell depth affects pressure drop too.

We measure pressure drop across the vent at the expected airflow rate. If it's too high, the fans have to work harder. If it's too low, maybe the cells are damaged or the depth isn't enough.

For high-power cabinets, we often run CFD models to figure out the right vent design. Where are the hot spots? Where does the air want to go? Put the vent where it does the most good.


Where the Heat Actually Goes

This is something people get wrong. They put vents on the back of the cabinet, figure that's where the heat comes out. And yeah, that's where the hot air is.

But the pressure in the cabinet matters. If the front door is solid and the back door is mesh, the air path is simple. If both doors have vents, the airflow might short-circuit. Cold air comes in the front, goes right out the back without passing through the gear.

We've worked with customers on cabinet layouts where we put vents in specific places to drive airflow through the hot spots. Not just anywhere. Where it's needed.


What Happens When You Ignore Shielding

I had a customer once who was building high-performance computing clusters. Lots of cores. Lots of memory. Lots of high-speed interconnects.

They had a problem with random packet loss. Not constant. Just enough to be annoying. They swapped switches. Replaced cables. Updated firmware. Nothing helped.

Finally someone put a spectrum analyzer near the cabinets. The noise coming out of the back vents was massive. All that high-speed signaling was radiating out through the open mesh and interfering with itself. The EMI was bouncing around the room and getting back into the cables.

They swapped the back doors for waveguide array vents. Same airflow. Same temperature. The packet loss went away. The problem had been a vent the whole time.


What to Look For in a Server Cabinet Vent

If you're buying vents for high-power server cabinets, here's what I'd look for.

Cell size. 1/8 inch covers most data center frequencies. If you're running 25-gig or 100-gig, ask about smaller cells. Make sure the cutoff frequency is above whatever your gear is putting out.

Depth. Half inch is standard. For higher attenuation, go deeper. But check the pressure drop. Deeper cells flow less air.

Open area. 80 percent or more. Less than that and you're choking the airflow.

Material. Aluminum is fine for data centers. It's light. It conducts well. It doesn't corrode in a climate-controlled environment. Stainless is overkill unless your data center is near salt water.

Frame. The frame needs to be flat. Warped frames don't seal. Gaskets matter. If the vent doesn't have a conductive gasket, it's not making good electrical contact with the cabinet. That's a leak.


Installation Matters

I've seen good vents fail because someone installed them wrong.

The vent has to be bonded to the cabinet. That means conductive gaskets. That means clean mounting surfaces. No paint where the gasket sits. No corrosion.

Bolt torque matters too. Too tight and you warp the frame. Too loose and the gasket doesn't compress enough. We give torque specs for a reason. Use them.

If the vent is going on a door that opens and closes, the hinge side matters. A vent that's too heavy can put stress on the hinges. Not usually a problem with aluminum frames. But if you're using stainless for some reason, it adds weight.


What the Newer Racks Are Doing

The trend I'm seeing is toward higher density and higher power. That means more heat and more EMI in the same footprint.

Some manufacturers are building waveguide arrays directly into the cabinet doors. Instead of a separate vent panel, the door itself is the waveguide structure. Fewer interfaces. Fewer places for leaks.

Others are using variable-density vents. More open area where the hot spots are, less where they're not. Custom layouts for specific cabinet configurations.

And some are moving to liquid cooling for the highest-density racks. That changes everything. If the heat is carried away by water, the vents don't have to do as much cooling work. You can focus on shielding.


High-power server cabinets need both cooling and shielding. You can't have one without the other. If you cut holes for airflow and ignore EMI, you'll have problems. If you seal the cabinet tight for shielding, your gear cooks.

Waveguide array vents solve both problems. They let air move. They block RF. They're not magic. They're just honeycomb. But the cell size, depth, material, and installation all matter.

If your cabinets are running hot and your network seems flaky, take a look at the vents. That's usually where the problem is. And it's usually the last place anyone thinks to look.

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DOC Catalytic Converter

Key Functions of DOC in Modern Diesel Aftertreatment Systems


I've been around enough diesel aftertreatment systems to know that most people think the DOC is just there to clean up exhaust. And sure, that's part of it. But if you pull a DOC off a modern diesel and look at what it's actually doing, it's more like the quarterback. Everything downstream depends on it doing its job right.

Here's what that little can is actually handling back there.


Burning Up the Nasty Stuff

This is the job everybody knows about. Carbon monoxide and unburned fuel come out of the engine. The DOC lights them up. Turns them into CO2 and water.

The numbers are solid. A DOC that's working right knocks down CO by 90-something percent. Hydrocarbons by 80 or 90. That old-school diesel smell you remember from trucks in the 90s? That's hydrocarbons. The DOC kills that.

This happens all the time. Every time the engine runs. Idling, full throttle, doesn't matter. As long as the exhaust is warm enough, the catalyst is working.


Making NO2 for the DPF

This is the job nobody sees but everybody downstream depends on.

The DOC takes nitric oxide—NO—and turns some of it into nitrogen dioxide—NO2. Why does that matter? Because NO2 burns soot at a much lower temperature than oxygen does.

Think of it this way. If you're trying to burn the soot out of a DPF with just oxygen, you need it to hit about 600 degrees Celsius. That's hot. That's hard on everything. But with NO2 in the mix, you can burn that same soot at 300 or 350 degrees.

That's the difference between a system that works efficiently and one that's dumping extra fuel all the time.

The DOC controls how much NO2 gets made. Too little and the DPF struggles to clean itself. Too much and you can have other issues. The whole thing is tuned to get that ratio right.


Heating Things Up When Needed

Sometimes the exhaust just isn't hot enough to clean the DPF. That's when the DOC becomes a little furnace.

The engine computer dumps extra fuel into the exhaust. That fuel hits the DOC and burns. The DOC gets hot. Really hot. That heat carries downstream to the DPF and burns off the soot.

This is hard on the DOC. Those active regeneration events push temperatures up to 600, 700 degrees at the outlet. Do it too often and the substrate starts to feel it. But a well-built DOC is designed to handle it. The substrate holds up. The coating stays put.

I've seen DOCs that went through thousands of regens and still tested like new. I've also seen cheap ones that melted after a few dozen.


Protecting the SCR

The SCR is downstream. Its job is to reduce NOx. But the SCR is kind of picky.

First, it needs the right ratio of NO to NO2. The DOC provides that.

Second, the SCR hates hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons take up space on the catalyst surface. They poison it over time. The DOC burns those off before the exhaust ever reaches the SCR.

So the DOC acts like a bouncer. It cleans up the exhaust and makes sure only the right stuff gets through to the SCR. Without it, the SCR would have a much shorter life and a much harder job.


A Little Help With NOx

This one's not the DOC's main job. It's more of a side effect.

The NO2 that the DOC makes can react with soot in the DPF. That reaction burns soot, which is good. But it also reduces some of that NO2 back to NO. So the DOC helps with NOx reduction indirectly, by enabling the DPF to do its job with less fuel.

It's not the main event. But in a system where every percentage point matters, it adds up.


How It All Flows

Here's what happens in a modern diesel aftertreatment system.

Exhaust leaves the engine. It's got CO, hydrocarbons, NO, soot. Maybe 300 degrees if the engine is warm.

First stop is the DOC. The DOC burns most of the CO and hydrocarbons. Turns some NO into NO2. The exhaust leaves maybe 400 degrees. Hotter. Cleaner.

Next is the DPF. The NO2 from the DOC helps burn soot passively. If the DPF needs an active regen, the computer adds fuel. The DOC burns it, gets even hotter, and the heat helps the DPF clean itself.

Last is the SCR. The exhaust reaching the SCR has the right NO-to-NO2 ratio. The hydrocarbons are gone. The SCR does its NOx reduction job efficiently.

Every piece depends on the one before it. The DOC sets the table. The DPF does its work. The SCR finishes the job. If the DOC isn't right, nothing after it works right.


When the DOC Goes Bad

I've seen what happens when a DOC fails. It's never just the DOC.

If the DOC stops burning CO and hydrocarbons, the tailpipe smells like a diesel from 1995. The SCR gets coated with hydrocarbons. NOx reduction drops. The system fails emissions.

If the DOC stops making NO2, the DPF has to regenerate more often. More fuel burned. The DPF might not fully clean itself. Backpressure builds. Engine performance drops.

If the DOC can't heat up during active regens, the DPF never gets hot enough to burn its soot. The DPF clogs. Then you're replacing both.

I've seen trucks come in with a plugged DPF and a dead DOC. The DOC failed first. Nobody caught it. The DPF kept trying to regen but couldn't get hot enough. By the time someone figured it out, the DPF was toast too.


What to Watch For

How do you know if a DOC is starting to go?

Check engine light is usually first. The downstream sensors see conversion dropping off.

Backpressure goes up. If the substrate is melting or plugging, the engine has to work harder to push exhaust through.

Fuel economy drops. If the DPF has to regen more often, you're burning more fuel.

The diesel smell comes back. That's hydrocarbons getting past.

I've also seen DOCs that looked fine but tested bad. Substrate intact. Can looked good. But the catalyst had lost activity. No way to tell without testing. That's why we test ours before they leave the shop.


Bottom Line

A DOC does five jobs on a modern diesel.

It burns CO and hydrocarbons. It makes NO2 for the DPF. It heats up the exhaust when the DPF needs a cleaning. It protects the SCR from stuff that would poison it. And it helps with NOx reduction indirectly.

Every one of those jobs matters. If the DOC stops doing any of them, the rest of the system starts falling apart. The DPF clogs. The SCR loses efficiency. Fuel economy drops. Emissions go up.

The DOC is the first thing in the chain. If it's not right, nothing after it works right. That's why we spend the time getting it right. Not just for emissions. For the whole system.

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diesel oxidation catalyst

Key Functions of DOC in Modern Diesel Aftertreatment Systems



Most people think a DOC just cleans exhaust. And yeah, it does that. But that's not the only job. On a modern diesel, that thing is doing four or five things at once. Mess up one of them, and the rest of the system starts falling apart.

Here's what a DOC actually does back there.


1. Burn Up CO and Hydrocarbons

This is the obvious one. The one everybody knows.

Carbon monoxide and unburned fuel come out of the engine. Bad stuff. The DOC turns them into CO2 and water. Uses oxygen to do it. That's why it's called an oxidation catalyst.

A healthy DOC knocks down CO by 90 percent or more. Hydrocarbons by 80 to 90 percent. That old diesel smell you used to get from trucks? Gone.

This happens all the time. Every time the engine runs. Idling, pulling a hill, doesn't matter. As long as the exhaust is hot enough, the catalyst works.


2. Make NO2 for the DPF

This is the job nobody talks about. Might be the most important one downstream.

The DOC takes NO and turns some of it into NO2. Why does that matter? Because NO2 helps the DPF burn off soot at lower temperatures.

A DPF traps soot. Eventually it fills up and needs to clean itself. That's regeneration. Without NO2, you need about 600 degrees Celsius to burn soot. With NO2, you can do it at 300 or 350.

That's a huge difference. Lower temperature means less stress on the DPF. Less fuel wasted. Engine runs more efficiently.

The DOC controls how much NO2 gets made. Too little and the DPF struggles to regenerate. Too much and you can have other problems. The whole thing is tuned to get the ratio right.


3. Heat Things Up for Regeneration

This one's less obvious. The DOC can also help with active regeneration.

When the DPF needs to burn off soot but the exhaust isn't hot enough, the computer adds extra fuel. That fuel burns in the DOC. The DOC gets hot. Really hot. That heat carries downstream and helps the DPF burn its soot.

So the DOC acts like a little burner. Takes the extra fuel, burns it, raises the exhaust temperature by a couple hundred degrees.

This is hard on the DOC. Those regens are hot—sometimes 600 or 700 degrees at the DOC outlet. Over time, that adds up. But the DOC is designed for it. Substrate handles high temps. Precious metals stay stable.


4. Protect the SCR

The SCR is downstream. Its job is to reduce NOx. But the SCR is picky.

It wants a certain ratio of NO to NO2. The DOC provides that.

The SCR also doesn't like hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons poison the SCR catalyst or just take up space on the active sites. The DOC burns them off first, so the SCR sees cleaner exhaust.

Without the DOC, the SCR would have a much harder time. Need higher temps. Get poisoned faster. Just wouldn't work as well.

So the DOC acts like a gatekeeper. Cleans up the exhaust and sets the right chemistry before the exhaust gets to the SCR.


5. Help With NOx a Little Bit

This one's not the DOC's main job, but it happens anyway.

The NO2 that the DOC makes can react with soot in the DPF. That reaction turns some NO2 back into NO. But it also burns the soot. That's passive regeneration.

So the DOC helps with NOx reduction indirectly. Not through its own catalysis. By letting the DPF do its job with less fuel.

Side benefit. But it matters.


How All This Works Together

Here's the flow.

Exhaust leaves the turbo. Has CO, hydrocarbons, NO, soot. Maybe 300 degrees if the engine is warm.

First stop: the DOC.

DOC burns most of the CO and hydrocarbons. Turns some NO into NO2. Gets hot. Maybe 400 degrees coming out.

Next stop: the DPF.

The NO2 from the DOC helps burn soot. If the DPF needs an active regen, the engine adds fuel. The DOC burns that fuel and heats up. The DPF gets hot enough to burn its soot.

Last stop: the SCR.

Exhaust reaching the SCR has the right NO-to-NO2 ratio. Hydrocarbons are mostly gone. SCR does its NOx reduction job.

Every piece depends on the one before it. DOC makes the DPF work. DPF protects the SCR. SCR cleans up the NOx. If the DOC fails, the whole chain breaks.


When the DOC Fails

I've seen this happen. A DOC that's not doing its job causes problems everywhere.

If the DOC stops burning CO and hydrocarbons, the tailpipe smells like an old diesel. The SCR gets coated with hydrocarbons. NOx reduction drops off. Fails emissions.

If the DOC stops making NO2, the DPF has to regenerate more often. More regens mean more fuel. The DPF might not fully clean itself. Backpressure builds up. Engine performance drops.

If the DOC can't heat up during active regens, the DPF never gets hot enough to burn its soot. DPF clogs. Then you're looking at a full replacement.

I've seen trucks come in with a plugged DPF and a dead DOC. The DOC failed first. Nobody noticed. The DPF kept trying to regen but couldn't get hot enough. Eventually it filled up. Customer replaced the DPF but not the DOC. Six months later, same problem.


How Long They Last

A DOC is supposed to last the life of the vehicle. 500,000 miles or more. That's under normal conditions.

Things that kill DOCs early:

Engine problems. Bad injectors. High oil consumption. Coolant leaks. These put stuff in the exhaust that the DOC can't handle.

Overheating. Too many active regens. Or a regen that runs too hot. Substrate melts or the catalyst sinters.

Bad fuel. High-sulfur fuel poisons the catalyst. Not common in most places now, but still happens.

Physical damage. Substrate breaks loose from the mat. Then it rattles around and breaks apart.

Most of the time, when a DOC fails, the engine had a problem first. The DOC is just the first thing to show symptoms.


What to Watch For

How do you know a DOC is failing?

Check engine light is the first sign. The sensors downstream notice when conversion drops off.

High backpressure can mean the DOC is plugged. Melted substrate or accumulated ash.

Fuel economy drops. If the DPF has to regen more often, you burn more fuel.

The diesel smell comes back. That's unburned hydrocarbons getting past the DOC.

I've also seen DOCs that looked fine but tested bad. Substrate intact. Can fine. But the catalyst had lost activity. No way to tell without testing.



A DOC does five jobs.

Burns CO and hydrocarbons. Makes NO2 for the DPF. Heats up exhaust during regen. Protects the SCR. Helps with NOx a little bit.

Every job matters. If the DOC stops doing any of them, the rest of the system starts having problems. DPF clogs. SCR loses efficiency. Fuel economy drops. Emissions go up.

The DOC is the first thing in the chain. If it's not right, nothing after it works right. That's why getting the DOC right matters. Not just for emissions. For the whole system.

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Resistant Shielding Vent

High-Temperature Resistant Shielding Vents for Industrial Cabinets


Most shielding vents you see are designed for places that stay comfortable. Data centers. Telecom closets. Office equipment. They're fine at 40, 50, maybe 60 degrees Celsius. Push them past that, and things start to change.

Industrial cabinets are a different world. They sit next to furnaces. They hang on mining equipment that runs all day. They live in engine rooms where it never drops below 80 degrees. Add the heat from the electronics inside, and you're looking at 100, 120, sometimes 150 degrees inside that box.

Regular vents aren't built for that. Here's what fails when the heat goes up.


The Gasket Goes First

This is always the first thing to go. And it's the thing nobody thinks about.

Regular gaskets are made for normal temperatures. Foam starts breaking down around 70 or 80 degrees. It hardens. It takes a set. It cracks. Once the gasket fails, you've got a gap. And a gap means your shielding is gone.

Silicone rubber holds up better. Good silicone stays flexible up to 200 degrees or more. But not all silicone is the same. The cheap stuff has fillers that break down. The good stuff is pure.

For really high heat, you might need something else. Fluorosilicone. Viton. These are designed for high heat and chemicals. They cost more. They last where regular gaskets don't.

I've opened cabinets where the vent looked fine but the gasket had turned to hard plastic. The vent wasn't sealing anymore. The equipment inside was getting interference. Nobody thought to look at the gasket until they'd tested everything else.


The Brazing Gets Questioned

High heat does something else. It tests the brazing.

Most vents use brazing filler that melts at a certain temperature. That's how it bonds. In normal operation, the vent never gets close to that melting point.

But industrial cabinets can get hot enough to push the limits. If the filler starts to soften, the joints get weak. The honeycomb doesn't fall apart right away. But over time, with heating and cooling, the bond degrades. Shielding drops off.

We use high-temperature brazing filler for industrial jobs. Higher melting point. More stable at high heat. It's not standard. We have to specify it. But for cabinets that run hot, it's worth it.


Materials Expand at Different Rates

Here's something that doesn't matter in normal applications. Different metals expand at different rates when they get hot.

Aluminum expands a lot. Stainless expands less. If you've got an aluminum frame and a stainless honeycomb, the two parts grow at different rates. That puts stress on the brazed joints. Over hundreds of heat cycles, that stress adds up. Cracks form. The bond fails.

For high-heat applications, we match materials. Aluminum frame with aluminum honeycomb. Stainless with stainless. No mixing. The expansion rates match, so the joints don't get stressed.

I've seen vents where the honeycomb pulled away from the frame after a year in a hot cabinet. The brazing was fine. The problem was differential expansion. The two metals grew at different rates and eventually tore themselves apart.


The Honeycomb Itself

The cell structure matters too.

Thin walls heat up fast and cool down fast. Thicker walls hold more heat. They take longer to heat up and longer to cool down. That means the vent sees less thermal shock when the cabinet temperature swings.

For industrial applications where temperatures cycle a lot, thicker walls can mean longer life. Smaller cells have more metal per square inch. More metal means more heat capacity. The vent takes longer to heat through.

These are small details. But in a hot environment, small details add up.


What to Ask For

If your cabinets run hot, here's what you need to ask about.

Gasket material. Regular foam won't cut it. Silicone, fluorosilicone, or Viton. Ask for temperature ratings. 200 degrees Celsius continuous is a good target.

Brazing filler. High-temperature filler has a higher melting point. Not all manufacturers use it.

Matched materials. Aluminum frame with aluminum honeycomb. Stainless with stainless. If they're different metals, keep looking.

Thermal cycling test. Ask if they've tested the vent through the temperature range you expect. Not just at the high end. Cycling. Heating up, cooling down, over and over. That's what kills vents in the real world.


A Job I Remember

We had a customer building cabinets for a steel mill. The cabinets sat right next to the furnaces. Ambient temperature was over 100 degrees all the time. The electronics inside added more heat.

They tried standard vents first. Aluminum frames. Aluminum honeycomb. Foam gaskets. The vents worked for about six months. Then the gaskets hardened. The honeycomb started loosening in the frames. Shielding numbers dropped.

They came to us. We built vents with stainless frames, stainless honeycomb, high-temp brazing, and silicone gaskets rated to 200 degrees. Same size. Same shielding numbers. Different materials.

Those vents have been in there for three years now. No problems. The customer learned that standard parts don't work in non-standard environments.


Cost vs. Lifespan

High-temp vents cost more. No way around it. Better gaskets cost more. High-temp brazing costs more. Matching materials costs more. Testing costs more.

But here's the math. A standard vent that lasts six months and then fails costs you six months of reliability. You replace it. Maybe twice a year. Plus the downtime. Plus the troubleshooting.

A high-temp vent that lasts three years or more costs more upfront. You install it once and forget about it. In industrial environments, that's worth paying for.


When You Actually Need It

Not every industrial cabinet needs high-temp vents.

If your cabinet is in a climate-controlled factory, ambient temperature is 25 degrees, and your electronics are modest, standard vents are fine.

If your cabinet is next to a furnace, or on a mining rig in the desert, or in an engine room, you need something built for heat.

The line is around 70 or 80 degrees Celsius continuous. If your cabinet runs above that, start asking questions. If it runs above 100, you definitely need high-temp materials.


Bottom Line

Industrial cabinets get hot. Standard shielding vents aren't built for that heat. The gaskets fail. The brazing softens. Differential expansion tears joints apart.

If your cabinets run hot, you need vents built for the environment. High-temp gaskets. High-temp brazing. Matched materials. Testing to prove it holds up.

It costs more. It's worth it. Because a vent that fails in a steel mill or a mining operation costs you more in downtime than you saved on the part. I've seen that happen enough times to know.

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Shielding Vent Manufacturer

A Complete Buyer's Guide from a Shielding Vent Manufacturer


I've been making these things long enough to know how most people shop for them. They find a size that looks right. They find a price they like. They order. And about half the time, they end up calling me a year later with problems they can't figure out.

So here's what I wish every buyer knew before they placed that first order.


Start With What You're Blocking

Before you pick a vent, figure out what frequencies you're dealing with. This sounds basic, but you'd be surprised how many people skip it.

What's inside your enclosure? Radios? Transmitters? Sensitive receivers? What's outside? Cell towers? Radar? Other equipment nearby?

The vent needs to block whatever's trying to get in and whatever's trying to get out. If you don't know the frequencies, you're guessing. And guessing usually doesn't work out.

I had a guy once who ordered standard vents for a military project. Worked fine for what he was doing. Then the next project needed to block higher frequencies. Same vent. Didn't work. He was frustrated until we figured out the frequencies had changed.


Know How Much Air You Need

The vent's job is to let heat out. If it doesn't move enough air, your equipment cooks. Simple.

You need to know your airflow number. Usually in cubic feet per minute. If you don't have that, look at your fans. The vent shouldn't be the bottleneck.

A good vent runs 80 to 90 percent open area. That means it doesn't block much flow. But open area isn't everything. Deeper cells flow less air. That's the trade-off. Better shielding usually means less airflow. You have to pick where you want to be on that scale.

I've seen people order vents with great shielding numbers but terrible airflow. Their equipment overheated. The vent was doing its shielding job fine, but the gear inside was cooking. Balance matters.


Pick Your Metal

Aluminum is what most people get. It's light. It conducts well. It's easy to work with. For indoor stuff—data centers, factory floors, telecom closets—it's perfect.

But aluminum hates salt. Put it near the ocean or anywhere they salt roads in winter, and it starts falling apart. Not right away. But a couple years in, that vent is going to look rough. And the shielding goes with it.

For those places, you want stainless. 316L. Costs more. Weighs more. But it doesn't corrode. You put it up once and forget about it.

Some people do plated aluminum. Nickel or chromate. It's a middle ground. Works okay in mild environments. Not a substitute for stainless if you're right on the coast.

If you're not sure what you need, ask. A good manufacturer will tell you.


Cells Are Where the Shielding Happens

The honeycomb cells do the work. Cell size determines what frequencies get blocked. Smaller cells block higher frequencies.

Standard 1/8-inch cells cover most telecom and industrial stuff up to a few gigahertz. If you need millimeter-wave shielding, you need smaller cells.

Depth matters too. Deeper cells block more signal. But deeper cells also block more airflow. So you have to pick.

Most standard vents use half-inch depth. Good balance. If you need more shielding, you go deeper. If airflow is tight, you might go shallower.

This is one of those things where experience matters. A manufacturer who's been doing this a while knows what works for what application.


The Gasket Is Not an Afterthought

This is where a lot of cheap vents fall apart.

The honeycomb can be perfect. But if the gasket between the vent and your enclosure doesn't seal, you've got a leak. Doesn't matter how good the rest of it is.

Foam gaskets are cheap. They also take a set. You bolt them down, they compress, everything looks fine. A year later, that foam has hardened. It doesn't spring back anymore. Now there's a gap. A small gap, but at high frequencies, small gaps leak like crazy.

We use silicone for weather seals. Stays flexible. Doesn't take a permanent set. For EMI seals, we use conductive gaskets—silver-filled silicone or beryllium copper fingers. They're designed to maintain contact over years of use.

If a vent doesn't come with a good gasket, keep looking.


Installation Kills More Vents Than Anything Else

I've seen perfectly good vents fail because someone installed them wrong.

Over-tighten the bolts and you warp the frame. Under-tighten and the gasket doesn't compress enough. Both give you leaks.

Mixing metals is another one. Stainless vent on an aluminum enclosure without isolation? That's a battery. The aluminum corrodes around the bolt holes. A year later, the vent is loose and nobody knows why.

We give customers torque specs for a reason. Use them. Don't guess.


Testing Separates the Good From the Bad

Some manufacturers test their vents. Some don't.

The ones who don't figure the math is right, so the vent works. And usually it does. But materials vary. Tools wear. Process drifts. Without testing, you don't know when something went sideways.

We test every batch. Pull a sample and peel it apart to check the brazing. Run samples on a spectrum analyzer across the frequency range. Put them through salt spray and thermal cycles.

It takes time. It adds cost. It also means we know what we're shipping.


About That Low Price

I get it. Everyone wants a good price. But there's a reason some vents cost half what others do.

Maybe the material is thinner. Maybe the brazing is spotty. Maybe the gasket is foam that fails in a year. Maybe they don't test. Maybe the cell size is wrong for your frequencies.

I'm not saying buy the most expensive vent you can find. I'm saying understand what you're getting. A vent that costs half as much but fails in two years isn't a bargain. You'll buy it twice. Or you'll spend weeks chasing problems that started with a vent that wasn't right from the beginning.

I've watched this happen more times than I can count. Customers try the cheap ones. Then they come to us. They always say the same thing: "I should have just called you first."


Lead Times

Standard vents? We can usually ship those in a week or two. Custom shapes? That takes longer. Tooling has to be built. Process has to be dialed in.

A good manufacturer will tell you up front. Not "about four weeks." A real number. If they're vague, that's a red flag.


Write It Down

Specs. Drawings. Test results. Torque specs. Lead time. Price.

Get it all in writing. Not because you don't trust the manufacturer. Because when something goes wrong—and eventually something always goes wrong—you want to know what you agreed to.

A manufacturer who won't put things in writing? That's another red flag.

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