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Planar Wave Vent Panels

Keeping Dust and Rain Out of Outdoor Planar Wave Vent Panels – What We've Learned


I've seen way too many outdoor cabinets with planar wave vent panels that were fine for a year. Then the fan sucked in dust. Or rain blew in. The electronics got wet. Or the honeycomb clogged up. Equipment died.

People think a waveguide vent for outdoors is just a hole with a screen. Nope. Indoor, maybe. Outdoors, you need real dust and moisture resistance.

Here's what we've figured out – the hard way – about keeping outdoor planar wave vent panels dry and clean without killing airflow or shielding.


Two Things That Kill Outdoor Vents

Dust and water. That's it.

Dust gets pulled in by the fan. It packs into the honeycomb cells. Airflow drops. Equipment overheats. If the dust is conductive – carbon, metal – it can also mess up the shielding.

Water is worse. Rain, splashing, condensation. Water finds gaps. Gets inside the cabinet. Short circuits. Corrosion.

A good outdoor vent has to handle both. Not maybe. Every day.


IP Ratings – What You Need

IP rating tells you how well something keeps out dust and water.

IP6X – dust‑tight. That's what you want outdoors.

IPX4 – splashing water from any direction. IPX5 – water jets. IPX6 – powerful jets. IPX7 – temporary dunk. IPX8 – full submersion.

For most outdoor electronics – cell towers, traffic boxes, industrial control – IP54 or IP55 is enough. Dust‑protected, water jets.

For nasty places – coast, mines, heavy rain – IP65 or IP66. Dust‑tight, strong jets.

We've done IP67 for flood zones. Expensive. But sometimes you need it.


Dust – How We Keep It Out

Honeycomb cells are vertical. That's the natural way. But vertical cells are like little chimneys. Dust falls in and stays.

We can tilt the cells. Or put a louvered cover in front. Louvers block dust but let air through.

Better yet – a removable foam or mesh pre‑filter. Catches the big dust. Clean it once a month. The honeycomb stays clean. Cheap and easy.

Had a customer in a cement plant. Dust plugged their vents in three months. Added a washable pre‑filter. Now they clean the filter every two weeks. The vent itself goes two years between cleanings.

Also – fan direction. If the fan pushes air out of the cabinet, dust doesn't get pulled in. That's best. But if you need intake vents, use a pre‑filter.

And don't forget the frame gasket. Dust can sneak around the frame, not through the honeycomb. The gasket has to be continuous and compressed. No gaps.


Water – Trickier Than Dust

Water finds gaps. You have to seal every path.

Gasket. Closed‑cell silicone rubber. Doesn't soak up water. Stays flexible in hot and cold. Open‑cell foam is junk outdoors – soaks water like a sponge.

Drip lip. A little raised edge on the outside of the frame. Stops water from running down the cabinet face and into the gap.

Sealed honeycomb edges. The honeycomb is brazed to the frame, but there can be tiny gaps at the corners. We add a bead of sealant around the inside edge. Water can't wick in.

Drain holes. If water does get into the honeycomb, it needs a way out. We drill tiny holes at the bottom of the frame. Water drains out. Doesn't pool.

We learned this after a customer in Florida. Their vents collected condensation. No drain holes. Water sat in the bottom cells, froze, cracked the honeycomb. Added drain holes – problem solved.


Material – Aluminum vs. Stainless

Aluminum is fine for sheltered outdoor – under an eave, inside a cabinet with a rain hood. But aluminum corrodes in salt air. White powder. Shielding drops.

Stainless 304 is better. Resists rust. But 304 can still pit in heavy salt spray over years.

Stainless 316L is best for marine or chemical plants. Molybdenum stops pitting. Costs more. Lasts.

We also do nickel‑plated aluminum. Cheaper than stainless, decent corrosion resistance. Good for moderate outdoor. Not for direct salt spray.

Coastal telecom site – tried aluminum vents. Corroded in 18 months. Switched to 316L stainless. Five years later, still fine.


Testing – We Try to Kill Them

We don't guess about dust and water.

Dust test. Put the vent in a chamber with talc or Arizona dust. Pull air through for 8 hours. Check inside the cabinet. No dust? Pass.

Water test. Mount vent on a test box. Spray water from a nozzle at different angles (IPX4, 5, 6). Look for water inside.

Condensation test. Heat and cool the vent while mounted. See if water forms inside honeycomb. If yes, add drain holes or a breather membrane.

Salt spray. 500 hours minimum for coastal vents. No visible corrosion.


Failures We've Seen in the Field

Cement plant – dust plugged vents in 3 months. Added pre‑filter. Fixed.

Wrong gasket – open‑cell foam. Rain soaked right through. Switched to closed‑cell silicone.

Aluminum vent on coast – corners corroded. Shielding lost. Replaced with 316L stainless.

No drain holes – condensation froze, cracked cells. Drilled holes. Fixed.

Fan intake on windward side – rain blown straight into vent. Moved vent or added rain hood.


What to Look for in an Outdoor Planar Wave Vent

My checklist.

IP rating. At least IP54. Harsh sites need IP65 or 66.

Gasket. Closed‑cell silicone. Not foam.

Material. 316L stainless for coast or chemicals. Nickel‑plated aluminum for moderate.

Drain holes. Yes. At the bottom.

Pre‑filter option. Yes for dusty sites.

Test data. Ask for dust and water test reports. Don't trust marketing.

Mounting. Put intake vent on the lee side – away from wind and rain.


An outdoor planar wave vent panel has three jobs. Block RF. Pass air. Keep out dust and water.

Miss any one, and your equipment fails.

We design for all three. Closed‑cell silicone gaskets. Drain holes. Stainless or plated aluminum. Pre‑filters for dust. Tested to real IP ratings.

I've seen cheap vents save $50 and cost thousands in downtime, fried boards, and service calls.

Spend the money on a proper outdoor vent. Your electronics will last. And you won't be driving to a site in the rain at 2 AM to swap a dead cabinet. Trust me on that.

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waveguide vent panels

Common Causes of Shielding Failure in Planar Wave Vent Panels – What We've Seen


I've looked at a lot of planar wave vent panels that weren't shielding anymore. They looked fine from the outside. No visible damage. But put a spectrum analyzer near them, and the RF was pouring out.

People always assume the honeycomb itself went bad. That's rarely it. The shielding failure almost always comes from something else – installation, environment, or just bad design.

Here's my list. The real reasons waveguide vent panels stop shielding.


1. The Gasket Is Missing or Dead

This is number one. By a lot.

A planar wave vent panel needs a conductive gasket between the frame and the enclosure. No gasket, no seal. RF leaks right through the gap.

I've seen panels that came from the factory with no gasket at all. Just bare metal on painted metal. The customer bolted it on and wondered why it didn't shield.

Other times, the gasket is there but it's the wrong type. Foam that takes a permanent set after a year. The vent gets hot, cools down, the foam doesn't spring back. Gap opens up. RF leaks.

Or the gasket is crushed from over‑tightening. Bolt it down too hard, and the gasket squishes out of the way. Metal touches metal, but not evenly. Gaps everywhere.

Fix: Use a conductive gasket rated for the temperature. Torque to spec. Replace gaskets every few years in demanding environments.


2. Paint Under the Gasket

People mount EMI vent panels directly onto a painted enclosure. The paint insulates. The gasket can't make electrical contact.

I saw a telecom cabinet once. Brand new vent, nice gasket, bolted down tight. Zero shielding at 1 GHz. The guy had painted the whole cabinet after drilling the hole. The gasket was sitting on 0.5 mm of blue paint.

We scraped the paint off around the mounting flange. Reinstalled the vent. Shielding came back to spec.

Fix: Mount the vent on a clean, bare metal surface. No paint. No anodize. No powder coat.


3. The Frame Is Warped

If the frame isn't flat, the gasket doesn't compress evenly. You get high spots and low spots. High spots crush the gasket. Low spots leave a gap.

Warping happens from poor manufacturing, or from over‑tightening the mounting screws. I've seen guys crank down on a vent until the frame bowed in the middle.

Fix: Use a stiff enough frame – 2‑3 mm thick minimum. Torque to spec. If the frame is already warped, replace it.


4. Wrong Cell Size for the Frequency

A planar wave vent panel only blocks frequencies above its cutoff. If your interference is at 500 MHz and your vent is designed for 2 GHz, it won't do much.

The cutoff frequency is determined by cell size. 1/8‑inch cells cut off around 1-2 GHz. 1/4‑inch cells cut off around 500-800 MHz.

I had a customer with a radio transmitter at 450 MHz. They bought a standard 1/8‑inch vent. Shielding was terrible. Switched to a 1/4‑inch vent, and it worked fine.

Fix: Match the cell size to your problem frequencies. Don't assume one size fits all.


5. Corrosion – The Slow Killer

Aluminum waveguide vent panels on a coastal site or in a chemical plant. A year later, the surface is white and powdery. The electrical conductivity is gone. Shielding drops 20, 30, 40 dB.

We cut one open that had been in a salt spray chamber for 500 hours. The honeycomb was still intact, but the aluminum surface was oxidized. You could measure the resistance across the frame – it was hundreds of ohms.

Fix: Use stainless steel 316L for marine or corrosive environments. Or at least heavy nickel plating on aluminum. Replace aluminum vents every couple of years if you can't upgrade.


6. Broken Brazed Joints

The honeycomb is brazed to the frame and the layers to each other. If the brazing fails, the structure can still look fine, but the electrical path is broken.

We saw a batch of planar wave vents where the brazing furnace had run cold. The panels looked good, but when we shook them, they rattled. The honeycomb had separated from the frame.

Shielding was down 30 dB at all frequencies. The customer had installed dozens of them before we caught it. Costly recall.

Fix: Peel test every batch. Shake the vent before shipping. If it rattles, don't ship it.


7. Dirt and Dust Buildup

Not the most common cause, but it happens. Dust is non‑conductive. It fills the cells. That's not a big problem for shielding – air gaps still exist. But if dust is conductive (carbon dust, metal dust), it can bridge cells and create a new path for RF.

I saw this in a carbon black plant. The waveguide vent was packed with fine black dust. The dust was conductive. The vent was shorting the shielding – actually coupling RF from one side to the other.

Fix: Clean vents regularly. Use a filter upstream if the environment is dirty.


8. Mechanical Damage – Dents and Bends

Someone drops the planar wave vent during installation. Steps on it. Drives a forklift into the cabinet. The honeycomb gets dented. Cells collapse. The structure is damaged.

A dented cell can create a resonant cavity. That can actually make shielding worse than if the cell wasn't there. It can also break the conductive path.

Fix: Handle vents carefully. Inspect for damage before installation. Don't use a vent that's been dropped.


How We Diagnose Shielding Failures

When a customer sends back a planar wave vent panel that isn't shielding, we do a few things.

First, visual inspection. Look for dents, warped frame, crushed gasket, corrosion.

Then we put it on a flat plate with a new gasket and torque it to spec. Test shielding in a fixture. If it passes, the problem was installation – paint, warped cabinet, wrong torque.

If it still fails, we cut the honeycomb off the frame and test the honeycomb alone. If the honeycomb passes, the frame or braze is bad. If the honeycomb fails, the cell size is wrong or the material is corroded.

Most of the time, it's installation. A good vent installed poorly is a bad vent.


Real Example – Data Center Rack

A customer complained that their server rack was radiating EMI. They had our waveguide vent panels on the back door. We went on site.

The vents were fine. But the rack door was painted. The vent frame was bolted to the paint. No electrical contact. We scraped the paint off the mounting flange, reinstalled the vent, and the radiation dropped 20 dB.

That cost them nothing but an hour of labor. They had been chasing the problem for weeks.



Shielding failure in planar wave vent panels is rarely the honeycomb's fault.

Missing gasket. Dead gasket. Paint under the frame. Warped frame. Wrong cell size. Corrosion. Broken brazing. Conductive dust. Dents.

Check those first. Most of the time, you can fix the problem without replacing the vent.

If you have a vent that's not shielding, call me. I'll walk you through the checklist. More often than not, it's something simple. And simple is cheap to fix. That's the best kind of problem.

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Shielded Vent Panel

Shielded Vent Panel for Electronic Equipment Enclosure – Why Your Box Needs One


Seen it a hundred times. Guy builds a nice metal box. Spends good money on gaskets, filters, all that. Then he cuts a hole in the side for a fan and covers it with mesh from the hardware store.

And then he wonders why his equipment glitches.

A hole is a hole. RF gets in. RF gets out. That cheap mesh stops bugs. That's about it.

If you need cooling – and you always do – you need a shielded vent panel. Here's what they do and how to pick one.


What Is It?

Metal frame. Honeycomb inside. The honeycomb is thin conductive metal – aluminum or stainless. Bolt it over the fan hole in your electronic equipment enclosure.

The honeycomb cells are sized so RF can't get through. Air goes right through. No problem. RF hits the cell walls, bounces around, dies.

It's called waveguide below cutoff. Fancy name. Simple idea. Small hole, deep enough, waves can't fit.

A good shielded vent panel gives 60 dB or more at 1 GHz. That's a million times less signal leaking. Your gear stays quiet.


Why Not Just Use Perforated Sheet?

Perforated sheet has big holes. RF goes right through. At high frequencies, those holes act like antennas.

I tested 1/8‑inch perforated sheet once. At 1 GHz, maybe 10 dB of shielding. At 2 GHz, almost nothing. A waveguide vent with the same hole size but proper depth? 60 dB.

Depth is what works. Perforated sheet is thin. No depth. No waveguide.


Wire Mesh Is Worse

Mesh is woven. Openings are irregular. Low frequencies, it does something. Crank it up, and it's useless.

Plus, mesh is hard to bond to the box. You screw it on, contact is spotty. Leaks around the edges.

A real shielded vent panel has a flat frame and a conductive gasket. Bolt it down, gasket compresses, continuous seal.


Where You Need One

Any electronic equipment enclosure that has to pass EMC rules. That's almost everything with a chip in it.

Server racks. Telecom cabinets. Medical gear. Military stuff. Industrial controls.

If it has a fan, it has a hole. That hole needs a vent panel. Otherwise you're radiating like a radio station.

I had a medical device customer. Kept failing EMC testing. Found a 2‑inch gap around the fan. No vent. Just open hole. Added a shielded vent panel, passed next test.


What to Look For

Not all are the same.

Cell size. 1/8 inch is standard. Good up to a few GHz. Need to block 5G? Go smaller – 1/16 inch.

Depth. 1/2 inch is typical. Deeper gives more shielding but more airflow restriction. Trade‑off.

Material. Aluminum for indoor. Stainless for outdoor or coastal – salt eats aluminum.

Open area. 80‑90% is good. Less than that, your fan struggles. You'll hear it.

Gasket. Needs a conductive gasket around the edge. Foam with silver, or beryllium copper fingers. No gasket, no seal.

Frame. Flat and stiff. Warped frame won't seal.

We test all this. Flow bench. Spectrum analyzer. Same numbers every batch.


Installation – Don't Screw It Up

You can buy the best shielded vent panel and ruin it with bad installation.

Mounting surface has to be clean. No paint where the gasket sits. Paint is an insulator.

Right screws. Not too tight – you crush the gasket or warp the frame. Not too loose – gaps. We give torque specs. Use them.

Vent has to cover the whole opening. No gaps around the edges. Sounds obvious, but I've seen people mount a 6x6 vent over an 8x8 hole. Two inches of open space on each side. RF leaks like crazy.


Airflow – Don't Choke Your Fans

A shielded vent panel adds some restriction. A good one adds very little – 0.1 to 0.2 inches water pressure drop at typical flow.

A bad one – small cells, deep depth, low open area – can add 0.5 inches or more. Fans work harder. Louder. Move less air. Gear runs hotter.

We test pressure drop on every batch. If it's higher than spec, we know something's wrong.

One customer swapped from a cheap vent to ours. Same chassis, same fans. Fan RPM dropped 20% because they didn't have to fight the vent. System was quieter and cooler.


Cleaning – Dust Happens

Vents collect dust. Dust blocks cells. Less airflow. Less shielding (if dust is conductive, it can even kill shielding).

Indoor use – clean every year or two. Vacuum from outside. Or blow compressed air from inside out.

Dirty environments – factories, construction sites – you might need a removable pre‑filter. Clean filter monthly, vent yearly.

We had a customer in a cement plant. Vents packed solid after six months. Equipment overheating. Cleaned vents, temp dropped 15°C.


Real Example – Server Rack

Customer had a server rack with 3,000 watts of heat. Eight fans. Used a cheap shielded vent panel with 1/16‑inch cells and a plastic frame. Shielding okay. Fans screamed.

We replaced with our standard 1/8‑inch, aluminum frame, conductive gasket vent. Pressure drop cut in half. Fans got quieter. Rack temperature dropped 4°C. They ordered 50 more.


Bottom Line

If your electronic equipment enclosure has a cooling fan, it needs a shielded vent panel.

Don't use perforated sheet. Don't use wire mesh. Get a real waveguide vent with right cell size, depth, material, gasket, frame.

Test it. Check shielding. Check airflow. Install it right.

We make these. We know what works and what doesn't. Cheap vent ends up costing more in fans, heat, failed EMC tests.

Spend the money. Get a good vent. Your gear runs cooler, quieter, passes the test first time. Worth it.

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Round Metal Substrate

Square vs. Round Metal Substrate – What's Different Under the Hood


Most people think a square metal substrate is just a round one with the edges straightened out. It's not. The two shapes behave very differently – in flow, in heat, in how you mount them.

We make both. Round catalytic carriers go out the door every day. Square ones? Less often, but when someone needs square, they really need it. Here's what I've learned about how they compare.


Flow Distribution – Round Wins

Exhaust gas doesn't like corners. It wants to flow straight and spread out evenly. A round metal substrate has no corners. The flow distributes naturally.

A square catalytic carrier has four corners. Gas can slow down in the corners or speed up along the flat sides. You get uneven flow. Some parts of the substrate work harder, some do nothing.

We tested this on a flow bench. Same open area, same cell density, same length. The round substrate had flow variation of +/- 5% across the face. The square one was +/- 15%. That's a big difference.

Winner: Round.


Backpressure – Depends on Housing

If you put a round metal substrate in a round can, backpressure is predictable. If you put a round substrate in a square can – which some people try – you get gaps in the corners. Exhaust bypasses. Backpressure drops, but so does conversion.

A square catalytic carrier in a square can fills the space. No bypass. But the corners and edges create a little more friction. Backpressure is usually 5–10% higher than a round one of the same volume.

Winner: Round, if you have a round housing. Square, if your duct is square.


Conversion Efficiency – Square Can Win in Square Ducts

This one surprises people. In a square housing, a round metal substrate leaves gaps in the corners. Exhaust sneaks through without getting treated. Overall conversion drops.

A square catalytic carrier fills the whole duct. All the exhaust goes through the substrate. Even with slightly worse flow distribution, the total conversion can be higher.

We had a customer with a square duct. They used a round substrate with a transition piece. Conversion was 85%. Switched to square substrate – same cell density, same length – conversion went to 94%. No other changes.

Winner: Square, when the housing is square.


Thermal Stress – Round Is Forgiving

Round metal substrates expand evenly when hot. No corners, no stress points. They can take thermal cycling all day.

Square catalytic carriers have corners. The corners get hotter than the flat sides. Stress builds. Over time, that stress can crack the substrate – especially if the foil is thin.

We've seen square substrates crack at the corners after 500 or 1,000 heat cycles. Same material, same thickness, round version went 3,000 cycles with no cracks.

Winner: Round.


Mechanical Strength – Depends on Size

For small sizes – under 6 inches across – square catalytic carriers are fine. The span is short, so the flat sides don't have room to bow.

For large sizes – over 12 inches – round is much stronger. A round substrate is like an arch. The shape resists crushing. A square one wants to bow in the middle.

We made a 20x20 inch square metal substrate once. 0.08 mm foil. It bowed 3 mm in the center during the first heat cycle. We had to go to 0.1 mm foil and add internal support ribs.

Winner: Round.


Installation – Round Is Easier

This is the big one for anyone who has to put these things in cans.

Round catalytic carriers are simple. Wrap the mat, press into the round can. The mat compresses evenly. The substrate centers itself.

Square ones are a pain. The mat has to fill the corners. If the mat is too thick, the corners bunch up. If it's too thin, the flat sides don't seal. You need a special pressing fixture that supports the whole face evenly.

We've had customers call us frustrated because they couldn't get their square substrates into the cans without cracking them. We had to send them a pressing guide and a new mat spec.

Winner: Round.


Sealing – Square Is Harder

A round metal substrate seals all the way around. One continuous mat. No gaps.

A square catalytic carrier has corners. The mat has to go around corners without bunching or leaving voids. If the mat bunches, you get a high spot that can crack the substrate. If it leaves a void, exhaust bypasses.

We use special corner‑cut mats for square substrates. The mat is notched so it folds into the corner without overlapping. It took us a few tries to get the notch shape right.

Winner: Round.


When Square Is Worth the Trouble

After all that, why would anyone use a square catalytic carrier?

Three reasons.

1. Square duct. If your exhaust housing is square, a round substrate leaves gaps. You lose conversion. Square fills the space.

2. Stacking. Square substrates stack neatly side by side. Round ones leave wasted space between them. For large industrial systems with multiple catalytic carriers, square packs more volume in the same footprint.

3. Existing tooling. Some customers already have square cans – maybe from an old system or a proprietary design. Retooling to round would be expensive. They just want a square metal substrate that fits.

We've done square for all three reasons. It's more work for us, but it's the right part for the job.


Real Comparison – Same Engine, Same Size

We had a customer with an industrial engine. They had a square housing – 12x12 inches. They tried a round substrate with a transition cone. Conversion was 88%. Backpressure was fine.

They asked us to make a square metal substrate – same cell density, same length, same foil thickness. Conversion went to 96%. Backpressure went up 8%. They kept the square because the higher conversion mattered more.

That's the trade. Square gives better conversion in a square duct, at the cost of higher backpressure and harder installation.


What We Recommend

If you have a choice, go round. Easier to make, easier to install, more durable.

If your housing is square or rectangular, go square. But know what you're getting into. Thicker foil (0.08 mm minimum). Stainless only. Careful mat design. Proper pressing fixture.

If you try to put a round substrate in a square housing with a cheap adapter, you'll lose conversion. If you try to put a square substrate in a round housing, you'll have sealing problems.

Match the shape to the housing. It's not complicated.


Bottom Line

Round metal substrates are simpler. Better flow distribution. Less thermal stress. Easier to install. Better sealing. More durable.

Square catalytic carriers are for square ducts. They fill the space. No bypass. Higher conversion in the right housing. But they cost more, need thicker foil, and installation is a pain.

We make both. We've seen both work great – and both fail when used wrong.

If you have a round pipe, use round. If you have a square duct, use square – but talk to us first. We'll help you avoid the mistakes we already made.

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Square Metal Substrate

Keeping Square Metal Substrates Straight – What Makes Them Warp and How We Stop It


Round metal substrates are easy. They're symmetric. Heat them up, they expand evenly. Cool them down, they shrink back.

Square ones? Different story. Corners create stress points. The middle of the flat sides wants to bow out. Hot exhaust can twist a square catalytic carrier into a pretzel if you're not careful.

We've made a lot of square metal honeycomb for industrial exhaust systems. We've also seen plenty that came out of the furnace looking like a potato chip. Here's what causes the warping and how we keep our square substrates straight.


Why Square Wants to Move

A square metal substrate has four edges and four corners. When it gets hot, the metal expands. But it doesn't expand evenly.

The corners have more material – more foil layers meeting. They get hotter and stay hotter. The middle of the flat sides has less material. It heats up faster but also cools faster. That differential expansion sets up stress.

If the substrate is thin (0.05 mm foil), it can bow in the center. The corners can lift. The whole thing can twist.

We saw this on an early square catalytic carrier for a generator. After the first thermal cycle, it looked like a shallow bowl. The customer shoved it into the can anyway – cracked the mounting mat and the substrate itself. Not good.

Now we design square metal honeycomb with the warping in mind.


Foil Thickness – Go Thicker

The single biggest factor in anti-deformation is foil thickness. Thin foil flexes. Thick foil resists.

For round substrates, 0.05 mm works fine. For square, we start at 0.08 mm. For large squares or high-temperature applications, 0.1 mm.

Thicker foil adds weight and cost. But it's cheaper than replacing a warped catalytic carrier that doesn't seal in the housing.

We had a customer insist on 0.05 mm for a square substrate because they wanted to save weight. We warned them. They tried it anyway. Every single one warped in the first heat cycle. They went to 0.08 mm on the next order. No warping.


Material – Stainless Only

Aluminum is out for square metal substrates in industrial exhaust. Too soft. Too much thermal expansion. It'll warp at temperatures that stainless laughs at.

We use 304 for most square catalytic carriers. 316 if there's corrosion risk. For really high heat – above 700°C – we go to 347 stainless. It has better creep resistance.

We've had customers ask for square aluminum substrates for low-temperature applications. Fine, as long as the temp stays under 400°C and the part is small. But for anything that cycles hot, stainless is the only answer.


Brazing – Hold Those Corners

The brazed joints are what keep a square metal honeycomb from coming apart. But they also affect how the part moves under heat.

If the brazing is too brittle, the substrate can't flex slightly during thermal expansion. Something has to give – usually the corner joints.

We use a ductile brazing filler for square catalytic carriers. It has a little give. Not much, but enough to absorb the differential expansion without cracking.

We also add extra filler at the corners. That's where the stress concentrates. A thin strip of brazing foil placed along each corner before firing ensures those joints are the strongest part.

Peel tests on corner samples tell us if the braze held. If a corner peels apart clean, we know the brazing wasn't right. We adjust the filler placement or the furnace profile.


Cell Density – Lower Is Stiffer

Cell density affects the substrate's mechanical strength. A 400 cpsi square metal substrate has more walls per square inch than a 200 cpsi one. More walls means more brazed joints. More joints means a stiffer structure.

But high cell density also means thinner walls. Thin walls are weaker. There's a trade‑off.

For square catalytic carriers that need to resist warping, we usually recommend 300 cpsi. That's a good balance – enough walls for stiffness, thick enough walls for strength.

We did a test once. Same foil thickness, same material, same size. 400 cpsi vs. 200 cpsi. The 400 cpsi part was noticeably stiffer – you could feel it when you tried to twist it. But it also had higher backpressure. The customer chose 300 cpsi as the compromise.


Geometry – Aspect Ratio Matters

A square that's 10x10 inches is fine. A rectangle that's 20x5 inches is more likely to bow along the long side.

The longer the unsupported span, the more the substrate can deflect. For rectangles, we sometimes add internal support – metal ribs that run across the catalytic carrier to stiffen it. Those ribs have to be designed so they don't block too much flow.

We had a customer need a 24x8 inch square metal substrate. That's a long, thin rectangle. We built it with 0.1 mm foil and added two ribs – thin metal strips brazed into the layers. The ribs held the center from bowing. The customer flow‑tested it. Pressure drop was higher than without ribs, but the substrate stayed flat.


Mounting – Don't Squeeze Too Hard

Even the straightest metal honeycomb can warp during installation. If the can is too tight, pressing the substrate in can bow the flat sides.

We control the gap between the catalytic carrier and the can to within 0.3 mm for square parts. Tight enough that the mat seals, loose enough that the substrate isn't stressed.

We also recommend that customers use a pressing fixture that supports the whole square face evenly. A point load in the center will bow the substrate before it ever sees exhaust.

One customer was pressing their square substrates into cans with a hydraulic ram that pushed only on the center. They had a 20% bowing rate. We showed them how to use a flat platen and a slower press speed. Bowing rate dropped to under 2%.


Testing We Do for Deformation

We don't just hope a square metal substrate stays straight. We try to bend it.

Heat soak test. Put the substrate in an oven at 600°C for 24 hours. Cool to room temp. Measure flatness on a surface plate. A good catalytic carrier should be flat within 0.5 mm across the face.

Thermal cycle test. 100 cycles from room temp to 600°C and back. Then check flatness again. If it moved more than 1 mm, the design fails.

Installation simulation. Press the square substrate into a test can with the specified mat and gap. Check flatness after pressing. If it bowed, we adjust the gap or the pressing method.

Vibration test. Mount the square catalytic carrier in a can and shake it at 50 Hz for 24 hours. Then measure flatness. Vibration can loosen the mat, which allows the substrate to move.

We keep records of every test. If a customer has a warping problem in the field, we dig into our data to see if our test predicted it.


Signs of Deformation in the Field

How do you know if a square metal substrate has warped in service?

Increased backpressure. The substrate may have bowed and blocked part of the can.

Uneven temperature across the face. Infrared camera shows hot spots where gas is bypassing.

Rattle. The substrate may have twisted and lost contact with the mounting mat.

Low conversion efficiency. Exhaust is sneaking around the edges.

We've seen all of these. Usually it's because the catalytic carrier was underspecified for the application. Thin foil, wrong material, or bad mounting.


Real Example

We made square metal substrates for a paint booth oxidizer. The housing was 18x18 inches. Exhaust temp 550°C. They wanted 400 cpsi, which meant thin walls – 0.05 mm foil.

We warned them about warping at that temp with thin foil. They tested a batch anyway. After 1,000 hours, the substrates had bowed in the middle by 3 mm. The edges were lifting. Conversion dropped.

They switched to 0.08 mm foil with 300 cpsi. Warping dropped to under 0.5 mm. Efficiency stayed high. They ordered 200 more.


Square metal substrates want to warp. Corners, flat sides, thin foil – they all work against you.

Thicker foil (0.08 mm minimum). Stainless only. Ductile brazing with extra corner filler. Lower cell density (300 cpsi). Careful aspect ratio. Proper mounting gap and pressing method.

Test before you ship. Heat soak, thermal cycle, installation simulation, vibration.

We've made square catalytic carriers that survived thousands of hours without measurable distortion. It's not magic. It's just paying attention to the details that round substrates don't need.

If you need a square metal honeycomb that stays square, talk to us. We've learned the hard way what works – and we'll save you the trouble of learning it yourself.

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DOC catalytic converter

Keeping DOC Catalyst Coating Consistent – Batch After Batch After Batch


I've cut open cheap DOC catalytic converters where the coating looked like someone smeared it on with their fingers. Thick here, thin there. Bare metal showing through.

Those DOC converters don't last. No surprise.

We do it different. Here's how we keep the washcoat and precious metal coating the same on every diesel oxidation catalyst that leaves the shop.


The Slurry Has to Be Right

The washcoat is a ceramic goop. Alumina, water, some binders. If the goop changes, the coating changes. Too thick, it plugs cells. Too thin, not enough surface area.

We make our own washcoat here. Same recipe every time. Same thickness. We use a Ford cup – just a little cup with a hole. Time how long it takes to drain. Same number every batch.

We filter it too. No lumps. Lumps would clog the dip tank.

Once we got a batch of alumina powder that was too coarse. The washcoat looked fine but didn't flow right. Caught it on the viscosity check. Sent the powder back. Saved a whole run.


Dip and Blow – Don't Guess the Pressure

The DOC substrate goes in the washcoat tank. Comes out dripping. Then we blow the excess out with an air knife – a curtain of air that pushes the goop out of the cells.

Air pressure is key. Too low, too much washcoat stays – high backpressure. Too high, you blow too much out – low surface area.

We set the pressure with a regulator. Same pressure every time. Operators check it at the start of each shift.

After that, we weigh the DOC. The weight gain tells us the washcoat loading. Target is something like 50 grams per liter, plus or minus 2. If it's outside that, the part gets tossed.

We log every weight. That's our first check.


Drying – Take It Slow

The wet washcoat has to dry without cracking. Dry it too fast, it shrinks and cracks open. Cracks mean less surface area and the coating can flake off later.

We dry the DOC in an oven. Ramp the temperature slow – from room temp to 120°C over two hours. Then hold.

Air circulates inside to keep it even. No hot spots.

The oven has a temperature recorder. We check the chart after every batch. If the ramp was wrong, we find out why.


Firing – Hot Enough, But Not Too Hot

After drying, the DOC goes into a hotter furnace. That's where the washcoat bonds to the metal.

Too cold, the washcoat doesn't stick – it flakes off. Too hot, the washcoat over‑sinters – pores close up, surface area drops.

We run the same profile every time. Ramp to 500°C, hold 30 minutes, then cool. Thermocouples inside log every batch.

We also run test coupons – little metal pieces with the same washcoat. After firing, we bend the coupon. If the washcoat flakes off, the firing was bad. If it stays put, good.


Precious Metals – Platinum and Palladium

Now the active stuff. We use a liquid solution with platinum and palladium salts.

Dip the DOC. Dry it. Fire it again.

The precious metal loading is in grams per cubic foot of substrate. For a typical DOC, about 30 grams per cubic foot – a mix.

We control loading by the concentration of the solution and the dip time. We send samples to a lab for assay regularly.

After coating, we weigh the DOC again. The gain tells us the loading. It's a small gain – maybe 10 grams for a big DOC – so our scales are precise.

If the loading is off by more than 5%, the batch gets re‑coated or scrapped.


Final Fire – Lock It In

One more firing. This fixes the precious metals to the washcoat.

Same deal – temperature control is everything. Too low, the metals don't bond. Too high, they clump together.

Same furnace profile every time. Same ramp, same soak, same cool. Logged.

After firing, we test a sample DOC on our lab reactor. Flow synthetic exhaust at 300°C, measure CO and hydrocarbon conversion. Numbers within spec? Batch ships.


What We Check for Every Batch

Honestly, there's a list.

Viscosity of the washcoat slurry. Logged.

Washcoat weight gain. Recorded.

Drying oven chart. Saved.

Firing profile. Saved.

Precious metal solution assay. Lab report.

Precious metal weight gain. Recorded.

Final fire profile. Saved.

Lab reactor test. On file.

And we keep a coated sample from every batch. Labeled with batch number and date. A year later, customer has a problem, we can go back and test that sample.


What Goes Wrong – And How We Catch It

Seen plenty of coating failures.

Washcoat too thick. Cells plug. Weight gain too high.

Washcoat too thin. Low surface area. Lab reactor test shows low conversion.

Drying too fast. Cracks. We see it under a microscope.

Firing too hot. Over‑sintered. Lab reactor test fails.

Precious metal loading low. Lab assay catches it.

Precious metal not bonded. Tape test – put tape on, pull, look for metal flakes.

Every one of these has happened at some point. That's why we check at every step. To stop bad parts before they ship.


Customers Can Check Too

If you buy DOC catalytic converters from us, ask for the coating batch records. We'll show you the logs.

Cut one of our DOC substrates open. The washcoat should be even all through. No thick spots, no bare metal.

Send a sample to an independent lab. They'll tell you the precious metal loading and distribution.

We've had customers do that. Every time, the report came back consistent. That's why they stay with us.


DOC catalyst coating consistency doesn't happen by accident.

Slurry viscosity. Dip and blow pressure. Drying ramp. Firing temp. Precious metal solution. Final fire. Testing.

We do all that because we've seen what happens when you don't. Uneven washcoat. Low precious metal. Poor adhesion. Short DOC life.

A diesel oxidation catalyst is only as good as its coating. And a consistent coating is only as good as the process behind it.

We take that seriously. Batch after batch after batch.

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武汉设计师男生征婚

1998年7月

211本科毕业

身高162cm

体重105斤

结构设计师

年薪15万-20万

坐标武汉

性格温柔随和好相处,活泼开朗,不拘小节,性格温和有爱心,积极乐观,会在意他人的感受。

平时喜欢打打羽毛球、爱听歌看剧出去看看。


希望遇见一个:

年龄相当

三观正

性格温和文静

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乐观开朗

有武汉定居意愿的女生

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联系方式见下--. .- - . ..-. .- -.-. .

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河南小伙征婚找对象

本人25

身高176

河南人

性格稳重踏实

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姐弟两个,姐姐已婚


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以结婚为目的的女生

合适可以慢慢了解

奔着过日子去的

gateface专发,请勿抄袭
联系方式见下--. .- - . ..-. .- -.-. .

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DOC Catalytic Converter

How We Build a Premium DOC Catalytic Converter – Step by Step on the Shop Floor


People think a DOC catalytic converter is simple. Just a metal can with some honeycomb inside. Braze it together, bolt it on, done.

I wish. If it were that easy, every cheap one on the market would last. They don't.

Making a premium DOC – one that actually survives on a diesel engine for years – takes a bunch of steps. And you have to get every one right. Miss one, and you're shipping a part that might crack, or plug, or just stop cleaning.

Here's how we actually build them. No fluff. Just what happens on our floor.


Step One – The Foil Has to Be Right

It all starts with metal foil. For a diesel oxidation catalyst, we use stainless. 304 for most jobs, 316 if there's salt or acid. Aluminum is out. Diesel exhaust has too much heat and vibration.

The foil thickness depends on the application. For a highway truck, 0.05 mm. For a loader or excavator, 0.08 mm. For a generator that runs 24/7, sometimes 0.1 mm.

Every coil gets checked when it comes in. Thickness at three spots. Surface for oil or scratches. We even run a test braze on a small coupon. If the braze doesn't stick, the whole coil goes back.

We learned that lesson years ago. A supplier changed their rolling process without telling us. The foil looked fine, but the brazing failed on three batches. Now we trust nobody.


Step Two – Forming the Corrugations

The flat foil goes through a set of forming rolls. Those rolls press the foil into a wavy shape – corrugations. The wavy strip gets sandwiched with a flat strip to make the honeycomb.

The rolls wear over time. We change them on a schedule, not when they break. Every hour, we check cell dimensions with a little gauge. If the gauge doesn't fit right, we stop the line.

For a DOC, cell density is usually 300 or 400 cpsi. 300 for heavy‑duty, 400 for lighter duty. We don't guess. We ask the customer about the engine, the load, the fuel.


Step Three – Stacking or Winding

Round DOCs get wound. We take the corrugated strip and flat strip together and wind them around a mandrel. Keep winding until we hit the right diameter.

Oval or rectangular DOCs get stacked. That's slower. You cut strips to length and stack them in a fixture, one layer at a time. The fixture has guide pins to keep everything square.

Stacking is harder than winding. One layer shifts, the cells get crooked. Crooked cells mean bad flow. We light‑test every stack before it goes in the furnace. Dark spots or streaks? That stack gets reworked.


Step Four – Brazing – The Heart of the DOC

The stacked or wound foil goes into a furnace. This is where the layers become one solid piece.

We put a brazing filler between the layers. For a diesel oxidation catalyst, we use a high‑temperature nickel‑based filler. Not the cheap stuff. It has to stay solid at 650°C.

The furnace heats up. The filler melts, flows into the joints, then solidifies. We control the temperature profile very tightly. Too cold, the filler doesn't flow – weak joints. Too hot, the filler runs everywhere and clogs the cells.

We log every cycle. Thermocouples inside the furnace, not just the controller. And every batch gets a peel test. We sacrifice one substrate, clamp a layer in a vise, and pull. If the foil tears before the braze lets go, it's good. If the braze separates clean, the whole batch is junk.

One night, the furnace drifted cold. Nobody noticed until morning. Peel test failed on three samples. We scrapped the whole batch. The operator was upset. But shipping bad parts would have been worse.


Step Five – Canning – Putting It in the Shell

The brazed core is still just a honeycomb. It needs to go into the metal can that bolts to the exhaust pipe.

We wrap the core in a mounting mat – a fiber material that expands when it gets hot. The mat holds the core tight and cushions it from vibration.

Then we press the wrapped core into the can. The fit has to be just right. Too tight, you crack the substrate. Too loose, it rattles. We control the gap to within a few tenths of a millimeter.

For a premium DOC, we sometimes add a mechanical retention ring – a metal lip inside the can that holds the substrate even if the mat loosens. Over‑engineered? Maybe. But on a diesel engine that shakes for 10,000 hours, it's cheap insurance.


Step Six – Coating – Where the Chemistry Lives

The bare metal does nothing. The catalyst is in the coating.

First, a washcoat – a ceramic slurry that creates a rough, porous surface. We dip the core, blow out the excess with air. Too much washcoat plugs the cells. Too little and you don't have enough surface area.

Then it goes through a drying oven and a firing furnace. The washcoat sinters onto the metal.

Next, the precious metals. Platinum, palladium – sometimes rhodium if the DOC also needs to reduce something. We dip the core in a liquid solution containing the metals. Then dry and fire again.

The metals end up as microscopic dots scattered across the washcoat. That's what actually cleans the exhaust.

We weigh the core before and after each coating step. The weight gain tells us the loading. For a premium DOC, we're generous with precious metals. Not skimpy. Because a diesel oxidation catalyst that loses activity after 1,000 hours is not a premium part.


Step Seven – Final Testing

Every batch gets tested. Not every single part – but samples from every batch.

Flow test. Put a sample on a flow bench, run air through, measure backpressure. If it's too high or too low, the batch doesn't ship.

Light test. Shine a light through. Dark spots mean clogged cells. Streaks mean crooked cells.

Peel test. We already did one on a raw substrate. We also do a peel test on a coated sample to make sure the washcoat didn't weaken the braze.

Thermal cycle test on new designs. Heat to 600°C, cool to room temp, repeat 200 times. Then look for cracks.

Vibration test on new designs. Mount in a can, shake at engine frequencies for 24 hours. Then check for loose mat or cracked braze.

We keep records on every batch. Foil coil number, forming tool, operator, furnace cycle, coating batch, test results. If a DOC comes back from the field, we can trace it.


What Makes a Premium DOC Different

Cheap DOC catalytic converters cut corners. Thinner foil. Cheaper brazing. Less precious metal. No testing.

A premium DOC does the opposite.

Thicker foil (0.08 mm instead of 0.05). High‑temp nickel braze. Heavy‑duty mounting mat. Retention ring. Generous precious metal loading. Full testing. Full traceability.

It costs more to build. It costs the customer more upfront. It lasts longer.

We've had fleet customers switch from cheap DOCs to ours. They paid 30% more per part. Their failure rate dropped 70%. Total cost per mile went down.


Bottom Line

Building a premium DOC catalytic converter is not rocket science. It's just doing a dozen small things right, every time, and not skipping steps.

Good foil. Precise forming. Solid brazing. Proper canning. Generous coating. Thorough testing. Full traceability.

We do all of that because we've seen what happens when you don't. Cracked substrates. Poisoned catalysts. Angry customers.

If you want a diesel oxidation catalyst that actually lasts, don't buy the cheapest one you can find. Buy one that's built like we build them. It costs more upfront. You'll forget that the first time you don't have to replace it.

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DOC Catalytic Converter

How Industrial DOC Catalytic Converters Clean Up Generator Exhaust – What We've Learned from Real Installations


I've been to a lot of generator sites. Backup units for hospitals, prime power for factories, continuous run for telecom towers. One thing they all have in common – the engine runs steady. No stop‑and‑go. No idle for twenty minutes then full load. Just constant RPM, constant load, sometimes for days or weeks at a time.

You'd think that would be easier on a diesel oxidation catalyst than a truck engine. In some ways, it is. In other ways, it's harder.

We've supplied industrial DOC catalytic converters for dozens of generator installations. Some worked great. Some had problems we had to solve. Here's what we learned.


How a Generator DOC Is Different

A truck DOC has to handle thermal cycling – hot, cold, hot, cold. A generator DOC gets up to temperature and stays there. That's easier on the substrate. Less thermal stress, less cracking risk.

But a generator also runs for long stretches. A truck might run 8 hours a day. A prime power generator might run 24/7 for weeks. That means the diesel oxidation catalyst sees more total operating hours in a shorter calendar time.

And the flow rate is steady. No surges. So the DOC can be optimized for a narrow range of exhaust flow and temperature. That's actually good – you can dial in the cell density and coating exactly.

The challenge is often space. Generator enclosures are tight. The DOC has to fit in whatever space is left after the radiator, the alternator, the control panel. Sometimes that means a custom shape.


Real Installation – Hospital Backup Generator

We worked with a hospital in the Midwest. They had a 500 kW diesel generator for emergency backup. It ran a weekly self‑test for 30 minutes, plus occasional actual outages.

Their problem was smell. During self‑tests, the diesel exhaust would drift toward the emergency room intake. The hospital got complaints. They needed a DOC catalytic converter to cut the hydrocarbons.

We sized a 300 cpsi stainless DOC – 0.08 mm foil, heavy‑duty mat, standard precious metal loading. The exhaust temp during self‑test was around 350°C, plenty hot for the catalyst to work.

We installed it in the exhaust stack right after the turbo. The hospital did a before‑and‑after smell test. The difference was obvious. No more diesel stink near the ER intake. They've been running that DOC for three years now with no issues.


Real Installation – Factory Prime Power

Another customer ran a factory in Southeast Asia. The grid was unreliable. They had a 1 MW diesel generator running 18 hours a day, every day. That's a lot of hours.

Their problem wasn't smell – it was emissions compliance. The local environmental agency started enforcing limits on CO and hydrocarbons. The generator was old, no aftertreatment. They needed a DOC to get under the limits.

We spec'd a 200 cpsi diesel oxidation catalyst – lower cell density to keep backpressure down. The generator was already working hard. We didn't want to choke it. Foil thickness was 0.1 mm stainless. Heavy‑duty all the way.

We also added a temperature monitor before and after the DOC. The customer wanted to see light‑off time and conversion efficiency.

The DOC cut CO by 85% and hydrocarbons by 90%. The factory passed their emissions audit. The catalytic converter has been running for 8,000 hours now. Still working.


The Problem of Low Load

Not all generator applications are steady high load. Some generators run at low load for long periods – like a standby generator that only does light weekly tests.

At low load, the exhaust temperature might only be 200°C or 250°C. That's marginal for a DOC. The catalyst needs about 250–300°C to light off properly.

We had a customer with a generator that ran a 20‑minute self‑test at only 30% load. The DOC never got hot enough. Hydrocarbons weren't burning off. The smell was still there.

The solution was to either increase the load during self‑test or preheat the DOC with an electric heater. The customer chose to change their test procedure – they put a load bank on the generator during the weekly run. Got the exhaust temp up to 350°C. The DOC started working.

Lesson learned – a diesel oxidation catalyst needs heat. If your generator runs cold, don't expect miracles.


Fuel Quality Still Matters

Generator fuel is often delivered in bulk and stored in tanks for months. That fuel can degrade. It can pick up water or bacteria. And the sulfur content might be higher than on‑road diesel.

We saw a case where a generator DOC lost activity after only 1,000 hours. We cut it open. The washcoat had a grayish‑white deposit. Lab test said sulfur poisoning.

The customer tested their fuel. Sulfur was 800 ppm – way above the 15 ppm typical for on‑road diesel. They switched to a lower‑sulfur fuel and replaced the DOC. The new one is still going after 3,000 hours.

If you're running a generator on off‑road or bulk diesel, test your fuel. Sulfur kills DOC catalytic converters.


Sizing the DOC for Generator Flow

Generator exhaust flow is predictable. You know the engine displacement, the RPM, the load factor. So you can size the DOC precisely.

Too small and you get high backpressure. The generator loses efficiency, maybe even trips on high exhaust backpressure. Too big and the DOC takes too long to light off, and it wastes space and money.

We use a simple formula – face velocity around 2–3 meters per second at full load. That keeps backpressure low and light‑off fast.

For a 500 kW generator, that usually means a DOC about 10 inches in diameter and 12 inches long. But every engine is different. We ask for the engine specs before we quote.


Space Constraints in Generator Enclosures

Generator enclosures are packed. The diesel oxidation catalyst has to fit in the exhaust stack, which might have bends, silencers, and other components.

We've built DOC substrates in oval and rectangular shapes just to fit into tight enclosures. One customer had a generator with the exhaust pipe running between two structural beams. The only space was a 200mm by 150mm rectangle. We built a rectangular DOC to fit.

Custom shapes take more tooling time, but they work.


Maintenance and Monitoring

A generator DOC doesn't need much maintenance. But you should monitor a few things.

Backpressure. Install a pressure gauge before and after the DOC. If backpressure goes up, the DOC might be plugging with soot.

Temperature. A thermocouple before and after the DOC tells you when it lights off. If the temperature rise across the DOC drops, the catalyst might be losing activity.

Visual inspection. If you can, look at the DOC face during annual service. Soot buildup? Cracks? White deposits? All tell a story.

We provide customers with a simple log sheet. Record backpressure and temp rise every month. If numbers change, call us.


Bottom Line

Industrial DOC catalytic converters work well on generator exhaust – if you size them right, match the cell density to the load, and pay attention to fuel quality.

Steady temperature is easier on the substrate. But low‑load applications need preheating or higher test loads. Stainless foil, 300 cpsi, 0.08 mm thickness is a good starting point for most generators.

We've had successful applications on hospital backups, factory prime power, telecom towers, and even a landfill gas generator (special coating required). Every one taught us something.

If you have a generator that needs a diesel oxidation catalyst, tell us the engine model, the load profile, and the fuel you use. We'll spec a DOC that fits – and we'll help you avoid the problems we've already solved for other customers.

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Catalytic Converter

Why Aviation Manufacturers Choose Custom Catalytic Substrate Carriers (Not Off‑the‑Shelf)


Walk into any automotive parts warehouse, and you'll find a shelf full of catalytic converter substrates. Round. 400 cpsi. Aluminum or stainless. Pick a size, grab one, go.

Now try that for an aircraft. You won't find a shelf. Because there is no standard.

Every aviation manufacturer I've worked with – APU builders, ECS suppliers, even ground support equipment makers – they all need something different. Different shape, different cell density, different material, different mounting. Off‑the‑shelf doesn't exist.

Why? Because aircraft aren't cars. And the substrate carriers have to fit the aircraft, not the other way around.

Here's why they always come to us for custom.


Space Is Never Standard

A car has room under the floor. Not a ton, but enough for a round can.

An aircraft has no spare room. The APU is crammed into the tail cone. The ECS is buried in the belly, surrounded by ducts and valves and wiring bundles. The space left for a catalytic converter is whatever happens to be leftover after everything else is designed.

That leftover space is never round. Sometimes it's oval. Sometimes rectangular. Sometimes a weird D‑shape to clear a structural rib.

One customer sent us a cardboard template they'd made by pressing it into the cavity and tracing the edges. That was their "drawing." We built a custom oval substrate carrier to match.

Off‑the‑shelf round parts wouldn't fit. They'd have to redesign the whole compartment. That's not happening. So they call us.


Heat Is Higher and More Constant

An aircraft APU runs for hours at high power. No coasting. No stop‑and‑go. Just steady, hot exhaust.

Temperatures hit 650, 700, sometimes 750 degrees Celsius. That's way above what a car converter sees.

Standard automotive substrates – even the stainless ones – start to creep at those temps. The foil sags. The cells distort. The carrier loses shape.

So we build custom with higher alloys. 347 stainless. Inconel when it's really hot. Not off‑the‑shelf. The customer tells us their max temp, and we pick the material.

One APU builder tried a standard 304 stainless substrate from another supplier. It sagged after 500 hours. They switched to our custom 347 part. No sag at 2,000 hours.


Vibration Is a Different Beast

A car engine vibrates. But an aircraft APU vibrates at different frequencies, and the airframe adds its own shaking.

Standard mounting mats – the fiber wrap that holds the substrate in the can – aren't always enough. They can take a set, or they can loosen up over time.

For aviation, we add mechanical retention. A ring or a lip inside the can that holds the substrate even if the mat fails. That's not standard. That's custom.

We also adjust the foil thickness. Thicker than automotive – 0.08 mm or 0.1 mm – to handle the shaking. The weight penalty is worth the durability.

One customer had a vibration issue that kept cracking their substrates at the brazed joints. We went to a thicker foil and a softer, more flexible brazing filler. The cracking stopped.


Flow Requirements Are Different

An aircraft ECS moves a lot of air. Hundreds of pounds per hour. The substrate can't create much backpressure, or the whole system loses efficiency.

Standard 400 cpsi is often too restrictive. So we go custom with lower cell density – 200 or 300 cpsi. Bigger cells, less restriction.

But lower cell density means less surface area for the catalyst. So we have to balance. Sometimes we lengthen the substrate to compensate. Sometimes we use a more active coating.

There's no standard recipe. Every application gets its own calculation.


Weight Is Always Watched

Aircraft manufacturers weigh everything. A few grams here, a few there – it adds up.

Standard substrates are designed for durability, not weight. They use a certain foil thickness, a certain mat density, a certain can wall thickness.

We can shave weight by using thinner foil, lighter mats, and shorter lengths – but only if the operating conditions allow it.

One ECS customer needed a substrate that weighed under 200 grams. Our standard version was 280 grams. We went to 0.04 mm foil, a lightweight mat, and shortened the length by 10mm. Got it down to 185 grams. Passed all their tests.

That's custom. You don't find that on a shelf.


Materials Must Match the Environment

Not every aircraft application needs Inconel. Some are fine with 304 stainless. Some need 316 for corrosion resistance. Some need aluminum for weight, but only if the temperatures are low.

Standard suppliers stock one or two materials. We stock many, and we'll use whatever the customer's environment demands.

We had a customer building an ECS for a seaplane. Salt air everywhere. They needed 316L stainless for corrosion resistance, not 304. We built it. Off‑the‑shelf suppliers didn't even offer 316L in their catalog.


Certification and Traceability Aren't Optional

Aviation manufacturers don't just want a part. They want a paper trail.

They need to know the foil supplier. The batch number. The braze cycle. The test results. They need a certificate of conformance for every shipment.

Standard substrate suppliers often don't keep that level of traceability. They buy foil in bulk, run production, and ship. If something fails, they can't tell you which coil it came from.

We can. Every custom batch gets a unique number. We record everything. When an auditor asks, we have the answers.

That's a big reason aviation customers stick with us. Not just the part – the paperwork.


Testing Is Never "Standard"

A car substrate gets a flow test and a visual. Maybe a thermal cycle if the manufacturer is thorough.

An aviation substrate gets thermal cycle to 500 or 700 degrees, hundreds of cycles. Vibration testing at aircraft frequencies. Sag testing under load. Coating adhesion testing.

We don't have a "standard" test package. We ask the customer what their qualification requires, and we run those tests.

One customer needed a substrate that could survive 1,000 thermal cycles from –50°C to 650°C. That's insane. But we built a batch, tested it, and it passed. The data went into their certification package.


Real Examples

An APU manufacturer needed a custom oval substrate to fit between two structural members. Standard round wouldn't fit. We built a 300 cpsi, 0.08 mm stainless 347 part with a heavy‑duty mat and retention ring. They've ordered over 1,000 pieces.

An ECS supplier needed a lightweight substrate for ozone conversion. Space was tiny. We used 0.04 mm stainless, 400 cpsi, 60mm long. Weight was under 150 grams. They tested it to 500 thermal cycles. No cracks. They're on their third production order.

A ground support equipment maker needed a high‑flow substrate for a diesel APU simulator. Low backpressure was critical. We used 200 cpsi, 0.05 mm stainless, and a low‑density mat. They measured backpressure at 2% of their previous supplier's part. Engine ran cooler. They switched all their production to us.



Aviation manufacturers choose custom catalytic substrate carriers because off‑the‑shelf doesn't work for them.

Different shapes for tight spaces. Higher alloys for high heat. Thicker foil for vibration. Lower cell density for flow. Lighter construction for weight. Full traceability for certification. Testing that matches their requirements.

We don't have a catalog. We have a shop and a set of tools. When a customer calls with a sketch and a list of requirements, we listen. Then we build.

If you're in aviation and you need a substrate carrier that doesn't come from a shelf, give us a call. Bring your space constraints, your temperature specs, your vibration data. We'll figure it out. We've done it before. We'll do it again.

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