MOL Marine Use Diesel Particulate Filter

March 25, 2010

Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Ltd. announced the joint development with Akasaka Diesels Limited of a diesel particulate filter (DPF) for vessels that use marine heavy fuel oil. MOL reported that tests showed that the device removed more than 80% of particulate matter (PM) from diesel emissions. In the test, a DPF was installed on the main engine of an MOL Group-operated coastal ferry, the Sunflower Kogane. This test marked the first successful use of a self-regenerating DPF on a large vessel using marine heavy fuel oil. The Sunflower Kogane (9,710 gt, main engine: 9,267kw) is operated by The Diamond Ferry Co., Ltd., an MOL Group company.

The DPF includes filters made of silicon carbide ceramic fibers, which remove PM from the exhaust. An internal heating system automatically burns off accumulated PM in the filter to eliminate clogging. This eliminates the necessity for cleaning by seafarers and allows the filter to be used continuously.

Installation of the new DPF will potentially reduce soot emissions from vessels on ocean cargo routes as well as those entering and leaving ports and operating their engines while at berth, thus helping curtail possible effects of exhaust emissions. Following the success of the experiment, MOL and Akasaka Diesels will further upgrade the DPF to ready the device for practical installation on diesel main engines and auxiliary engines of large-scale ocean-going vessels.
 

Logistics News

US, Australia Sign Critical Minerals Agreement, Back Submarine Deal

US, Australia Sign Critical Minerals Agreement, Back Submarine Deal

Alaska LNG Pipeline Study Will Be Completed This Year

Alaska LNG Pipeline Study Will Be Completed This Year

Maritime Recruitment Webinar: How Much Does "Connectivity" Matter

Maritime Recruitment Webinar: How Much Does "Connectivity" Matter

Russian Wheat Export Prices Climb, Increasing October Estimates

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Archer Aviation signs deal with Korean Air for eVTOL Air Taxis
Prague bans shared electric scooters from 2026 due to 'chaos on the sidewalks'
Sources say that the attack by a Ukrainian drone on a Russian gas plant has affected Kazakh production