Internal Combustion Engine
Internal Combustion Engine
The hot gases produced by the combustion occupy a far greater volume than the original fuel,
thus creating an increase in pressure within the limited volume of the chamber. This pressure can
be used to do work, for example, to move a piston on a crankshaft or a turbine disc in a gas
turbine. The energy can also be used to produce thrust when directed out of a nozzle as in a
rocket engine.
Combustion chamber
A combustion chamber is the part of an engine in which fuel is burnerd.
Combustor
Afterburners
Some, mainly military, turbojets and turbofans have an afterburner located in the tailpipe, to
provide thrust augmentation during Take-off and Combat. On unmixed turbofans, 'afterburning'
in the bypass stream is often called Plenum Chamber Burning.
Rockets
Often the combustors in a rocket engine consist of impinging jets of fluid in the main chamber.
Combustion in rocket engines is performed at much higher temperatures, as no atmospheric
nitrogen is involved to cool the reaction.
Some staged combustion schemes in rocket engines combust outside of the main rocket chamber
in oxidiser or fuel rich mixtures and this acts to vapourise the fuel and/or LOX so that the
mixture later burns completely, quickly, stably and thoroughly in the rocket motor combustion
chamber. The gases from this pre-combustion are also used to drive the turbopumps.
Scramjets
In scramjet engines the combustor inlet flow is supersonic. Only a few practical scram-jets have
flown and their details are mostly classified. However, hydrogen fuel is believed to be injected
into a sheltered region, below a reverse-facing step. Unlike a conventional combustor, the Mach
number of the flow decreases going through the combustor.
Indirect injection
In an internal combustion engine, the term indirect injection refers to a fuel
injection where fuel is not directly injected into the combustion chamber. Gasoline
engines are usually equipped with indirect injection systems, wherein a fuel injector
delivers the fuel at some point before the intake valve
An indirect injection diesel engine delivers fuel into a chamber off the combustion
chamber, called a prechamber, where combustion begins and then spreads into the
main combustion chamber. The prechamber is carefully designed to ensure
adequate mixing of the atomized fuel with the compression-heated air. This has the
effect of slowing the rate of combustion, which tends to reduce audible noise and
softens the shock of combustion and produces lower stresses on the engine
components. The addition of a prechamber, however, increases heat loss to the
cooling system and thereby lowers engine efficiency and requiring glow plugs for
starting. In an indirect injection system the fuel/air mixing occurs with the air
moving fast. This simplifies injector design and allows the use smaller engines and
less tightly toleranced designs which are simpler to manufacture and more
reliable.Direct injection, by contrast, uses slow-moving air and fast-moving fuel;
both the design and manufacture of the injectors is more difficult, the optimisation
of the in-cylinder air flow is much more difficult than designing a prechamber, and
there is much more integration between the design of the injector and that of the
engine it is to be used in.[1] It is for this reason that car diesel engines were almost
all indirect injection until the ready availability of powerful CFD simulation systems
made the adoption of direct injection practica
Precombustion chamber
This chamber is located at the cylinder head and is connected to the engine cylinder
by small holes. It occupies 40% of the total cylinder volume. During the
compression stroke, air from the main cylinder enters the precombustion chamber.
At this moment, fuel is injected into the precombustion chamber and combustion
begins. Pressure increases and the fuel droplets are forced through the small holes
into the main cylinder, resulting in a very good mix of the fuel and air. The bulk of
the combustion actually takes place in the main cylinder. This type of combustion
chamber has multi-fuel capability because the temperature of the prechamber
vaporizes the fuel before the main combustion event occurs.[
Air cell chamber
The air cell is a small cylindrical chamber with a hole in one end. It is mounted more or less
coaxially with the injector, said axis being parallel to the piston crown, with the injector firing
across a small cavity which is open to the cylinder into the hole in the end of the air cell. The air
cell is mounted so as to minimise thermal contact with the mass of the head. A pintle injector
with a narrow spray pattern is used. At TDC the majority of the charge mass is contained in the
cavity and air cell..[citation needed]
When the injector fires the jet of fuel enters the air cell and ignites. This results in a jet of flame
shooting back out of the air cell directly into the jet of fuel still issuing from the injector. The
heat and turbulence give excellent fuel vaporisation and mixing properties. Also since the
majority of the combustion takes place outside the air cell in the cavity, which communicates
directly with the cylinder, there is less heat loss involved in transferring the burning charge into
the cylinder.
Air cell injection can be considered as a sort of half way stage between fully indirect and fully
direct injection, gaining some of the efficiency advantages of direct injection while retaining the
simplicity and ease of development of indirect injection.
Air cell chambers are commonly named Lanova air chambers.
Maintenance hazards
Fuel injection introduces potential hazards in engine maintenance due to the high fuel pressures
used. Residual pressure can remain in the fuel lines long after an injection-equipped engine has
been shut down. This residual pressure must be relieved, and if it is done so by external bleed-
off, the fuel must be safely contained. If a high-pressure diesel fuel injector is removed from its
seat and operated in open air, there is a risk to the operator of injury by hypodermic jet-injection,
even with only 100 psi pressure. [6]. The first known such injury occurred in 1937 during a diesel
engine maintenance operation .[7]
Direct injection
Many diesel engines feature direct injection (DI). The injection nozzle is placed inside the
combustion chamber and the piston incorporates a depression (often toroidal) where initial
combustion takes place. Direct injection diesel engines are generally more efficient and cleaner
than indirect injection engines. Some recent gasoline engines utilize direct injection as well. This
is the next step in evolution from multi-port fuel injection and offers another magnitude of
emission control by eliminating the "wet" portion of the induction system. By virtue of better
dispersion and homogeneity of the directly injected fuel, the cylinder and piston are cooled,
thereby permitting higher compression ratios and more aggressive ignition timing, with resultant
enhanced output. More precise management of the fuel injection event also enables better control
of emissions. Finally, the homogeneity of the fuel mixture allows for leaner air/fuel ratios, which
together with more precise ignition timing can improve fuel economy. Along with this, the
engine can operate with stratified mixtures and hence avoid throttling losses at low and part load.
Some direct-injection systems incorporate piezo electronic injectors. With their extremely fast
response time, multiple injection events can occur during each power stroke of the engine.
The first use of direct gasoline injection was on the Hesselman engine invented by Swedish
engineer Jonas Hesselman in 1925.[10][11]
DFI costs more than indirect injection systems; the injectors are exposed to more heat and
pressure, so more costly materials and higher-precision electronic management systems are
required.
Maintenance hazards
Fuel injection introduces potential hazards in engine maintenance due to the high fuel pressures
used. Residual pressure can remain in the fuel lines long after an injection-equipped engine has
been shut down. This residual pressure must be relieved, and if it is done so by external bleed-
off, the fuel must be safely contained. If a high-pressure diesel fuel injector is removed from its
seat and operated in open air, there is a risk to the operator of injury by hypodermic jet-injection,
even with only 100 psi pressure. [12]. The first known such injury occurred in 1937 during a diesel
engine maintenance operation[13].