The Evaporative Emission (EVAP) control system limits the fuel vapors
from escaping into the atmosphere. The EVAP transfers the fuel vapor from
the sealed fuel tank to an activated carbon (charcoal) storage device (EVAP
canister). The EVAP canister stores the vapors until the engine is able
to use the extra fuel vapor.
When the engine is able to use the extra fuel vapor, the intake air
flow purges the fuel vapor from the carbon element, and then the normal combustion
process consumes the fuel vapor.
The system is required in order to detect the evaporative fuel system
leaks as small as 0.040 between the fuel filler cap and the purge solenoid.
The system can test the evaporative system integrity by applying a vacuum
signal (ported or manifold) to the fuel tank in order to create a small
vacuum.
The control module then monitors the ability of the system to maintain
the vacuum. If the vacuum remains for a specified period of time, then there
are no evaporative leaks, and a PASS report is sent to the control module.
If there is a leak, the system either will not achieve a vacuum, or a vacuum
cannot be maintained. Usually a fault can only be detected after a cold start
with a trip of sufficient length and driving conditions to run the needed
tests. The enhanced evaporative system diagnostic conducts up to 8 specific
sub-tests in order to detect the fault conditions. If the diagnostic fails
a sub-test, the control module stores a diagnostic trouble code (DTC) in order
to indicate the type of fault detected.