Internal Combustion Engine
Internal Combustion Engine
Assignment No. 2
IMPORTANT ENGINE CHARACTERISTICS
These factors control total engine operating costs usually the primary
consideration of the user and whether the engine in operation can satisfy
environmental regulations.
• The maximum power (or the maximum torque) available at each speed
within the useful engine operating range
Maximum rated power: The highest power an engine is allowed to develop for
short periods of operation.
Normal rated power: The highest power an engine is allowed to develop in
continuous operation.
To evaluate the performance of an engine the following are the most important
characteristics.
• Thermal efficiency
• Mechanical efficiency
• Indicated work per cycle
• Mean effective pressure
• Specific fuel consumption
• A/F & F/A ratio
• Volumetric efficiency
• Engine specific weight/volume
• Specific emissions
Thermal efficiency:
Mechanical efficiency:
Part of the gross indicated work per cycle or power is used to expel exhaust
gases and induct fresh charge. An additional portion is used to overcome the
friction of the bearings, pistons, and other mechanical components of the
engine, and to drive the engine accessories. All of these power requirements are
grouped together and called friction power.
Since the friction power includes the power required to pump gas into and out
of the engine, mechanical efficiency depends on throttle position as well as
engine design and engine speed. Typical values for a modern automotive
engine at wide-open or full throttle are 90 percent at speeds below about 30 to
40 rev/s, decreasing to 75 percent at maximum rated speed. As the engine is
throttled, mechanical efficiency decreases eventually top zero at idle operation.
Pressure data for the gas in the cylinder over the operating cycle of the engine
can be used to calculate the work transfer from the gas to the piston. The
cylinder pressure and corresponding cylinder volume throughout the engine
cycle can be plotted on P-V diagram. The indicated work per cycle is obtained
by integrating around the curve to obtain the area enclosed on the diagram.
With two stroke cycles this application is straightforward. With the addition of
inlet and exhaust strokes for the four stroke cycle, some ambiguity is
introduced as two definitions of indicated output are in common use. These will
be defined as:
Gross indicated work per cycle: Work delivered to piston over the compression
and expansion strokes only
Net indicated work per cycle: Work delivered to piston over the entire four-
stroke cycle
In engine tests, the fuel consumption is measured as a flow rate. A more useful
parameter is the specific fuel consumption. It measure how efficiently an
engine is using the fuel supplied to produce work:
SFC = mf / P
Low values of SFC are obviously desirable. For SI engines typical best values
of brake specific fuel consumption are about 270 gm / kW and for CI engines it
is about 200 gm / kW
In engine testing, both the air mass flow rate and fuel mass flow rate are
normally measured. The ratio of these flow rates is useful in defining engine-
operating conditions.
The normal operating range for a conventional SI engine using gasoline fuel is
11< A/F <19 and for CI engines with diesel fuel, it is 17< A/F <71
Volumetric efficiency:
The intake system – the carburetor, the throttle plate (in a spark ignition
engine), intake manifold, intake valve, intake port – restricts the amount of air
which an engine of given displacement can induct. The parameter used to
measure the effectiveness of an engine’s induction process is the volumetric
efficiency. Volumetric efficiency is only used with four-stroke cycle engine,
which have a distinct induction process. It is obtained as the volume flow rate
of air into the intake system divided by the rate at which volume is displaced by
the piston.
Specific emissions:
In an Internal combustion engine when the fuel is combusted the heat energy
released during combustion increases the pressure and temperature of
combustion gases
Combustion gases:
The hot gases apply pressure on the piston and move it to produce mechanical
work.
Thermal Loses:
• Radiation loses
• Cooling system loses
• Exhaust loses
• Unaccounted for (dissociation, imperfect combustion)
Frictional Loses:
The friction loses are introduced due to the relative motion in different
components of the engine.
Modern oil engines although still called diesel engines are more closely derived
from an engine invented by Ackroyd-Stuart in 1888. All oil engines today use
solid injection of the fuel; the fuel is injected by a spring loaded injector the
fuel pump being operated by a cam driven from the engine crankshaft.
The heat is supplied in two parts, the first part at constant volume and the
remainder at constant pressure, hence the name dual combustion. In order to fix
the thermal efficiency completely three factors are necessary. These are: the
compression ratio, rv = v1/v2; the ratio of pressure, k=p3/p2and the ratio of
volumes, β = v4/v3
When β = 1 this result becomes the constant volume cycle efficiency. For k =
1, this result gives the constant pressure cycle efficiency.
The efficiency of dual combustion cycle depends not only on the compression
ratio but also on the relative amounts of heat supplied at constant volume and at
constant pressure.
The above equation is too cumbersome to use and the best method to
calculating thermal efficiency is to evaluate each temperature round the cycle
and then use equation
η = 1 – Q1/Q2
Q2 = heat rejected
Compression ration = Vd + Vc
Vc
L = 2a
V = Vc + π B2/4(l + a – s)
Where s is the distance between the crank axis and the piston pin axis and is
given by
θ
S = a Cosθ + (l2 –a2 sin2 )1/2
Where Ach is the cylinder head surface area and Ap is the piston crown surface
area. For flat-topped pistons, Ap = π B2/r
S’p = 2LN
Where N is the rotational speed of the crankshaft. Mean piston speed is often a
more appropriate parameter than crank rotational speed for correlating engine
behavior as a function of speed. For example, gas-flow velocities in the intake
and the cylinder all scale with Sp. The instantaneous piston velocity Sp is
obtained from
Sp = ds/dt
The piston velocity is zero at the beginning of the stroke, reaches a maximum
near the middle of the stroke, and decreases to zero at the end of the stroke.
Resistance to gas flow into the engine or stresses due to the inertia of the
moving parts limit the maximum mean piston speed to within the range 8 to 15
m/s (1500 to 300 ft/min). Automobile engines operate at the higher end of this
range; the lower end is typical of large marine diesel engines.
That cycles in which the fuel is burned directly in the working fluid are not heat
engines in the true meaning of the term. In practical such cycles are used
frequently and are called internal combustion cycles. The fuel is burned directly
in the working fluid, which is normally air. The main advantage of such power
units is that high temperatures of the fluid can be attained, since heat is not
transferred through metal walls to the fluid. The fluid in an internal combustion
engine may reach a temperature of as high as 2750 C. This is made possible by
externally cooking the cylinder by water or air cooling; also, due to the
intermittent nature of the cycle, the working fluid reaches its maximum
temperature for only as instant during each cycle.
Examples of internal combustion cycles are the open cycle gas turbine unit, the
petrol engine, the diesel engine or oil engine, and the gas engine. The open
cycle gas turbine unit, although an internal combustion cycle, is nevertheless in
a different category to the other internal combustion engines.
In petrol engine a mixture of air and petrol is drawn into the cylinder,
compressed by the piston, then ignited by an electric spark. The hot gases
expand, pushing the piston back, and are then swept out to exhaust, and the
cycle recommences with the induction of a fresh charge of petrol and air. In the
diesel or oil engine the oil is sprayed under pressure into the compressed air at
the end of the compression stroke, and combustion is spontaneous due to the
high temperature of the air after compression. In a gas engine a mixture of gas
and air is induced into the cylinder, compressed, and then ignited as in the
petrol engine, by an electric spark. To give a basis of comparison for the actual
internal-combustion engine the air standard cycle is defined.
IDEAL CYCLE:
An ideal gas is used as working fluid under all working conditions the
properties of the working medium remains constant.
Parameter of Gases:
Pressure
Volume
Temperature
Specific volume
Enthalpy
Entropy
AIR CYCLE:
Air behaves like an ideal gas with in the working range of pressure and
temperature of a working engine.
The assumption takes the working medium, a mixture of F/A, and residual
gases and the analysis is done for a theoretical cycle.
A comparison of a real engine p-v diagram over the compression and expansion
strokes with an equivalent fuel air cycle analysis is shown in figure. The real
engine and the ruel air cycle have the same geometric compression ratio, fuel
chemical composition and equivalent ratio, residual fraction and mixture
density before compression. Midway through the compression stroke, the
pressure in the fuel-air cycle has been made equal to the real cycle pressure.
The compression stroke pressures for the two cycles essentially coincide.
Modest differences in pressure during intake and the early part of the
compression process result from the pressure drop across the intake valve
during the intake process and the closing of the intake valve 40 to 60 degrees
after the BC in the real engine. The expansion stroke pressures for the engine
fall below the fuel air cycle pressures of the following reasons; heat transfer
from the burned gases to the walls: finite time required to burn the charge;
exhaust blowdown loss due to opening the exhaust valve before BC; gas flow
into crevice regions and leakage past the piston rings; incomplete combustion
of the charge.
HEAT TRANSFER
Heat transfer from the unburned mixture to the cylinder walls has a negligible
effect on the p-v line for the compression process. Due to heat transfer during
combustion, the pressure at the end of combustion in the real cycle will be
lower. During expansion, heat transfer will cause the gas pressure in the real
cycle to fall below an isentropic expansion line as the volume increases. A
decrease in efficiency results from this heat loss.
For spark or fuel injection timing which is retarded from the optimum for
maximum efficiency, the peak pressure in the real cycle will be lower, and
expansion stroke pressures after the peak pressure will be higher than in the
optimum timing cycle.
EXHAUST BLOWDOWN LOSS:
In the real engine operating cycle, the exhaust valve is opened some 60 degrees
before BC to reduce the pressure during the first part of the exhaust stroke in
four-stroke engines and to allow time for scavenging in two stroke engines. The
gas pressure at the end of the expansion stroke is therefore reduced below the
isentropic line. A decrease in expansion stroke work transfer results.
As the cylinder pressure increases, gas flows into crevices such as the regions
between the piston, piston rings, and cylinder wall. The crevice regions can
comprise a few percent of the clearance volume. This flow reduces the mass in
the volume above the piston crown, and this flow is cooled by heat transfer to
the crevice walls. In premixed charge engines, some of this gas is unburned and
some of it will not burn. Though much of this gas returns to the cylinder later in
the expansion, a fraction, from behind and between the piston rings, flows into
the crankcase. However, leakage in a well designed and maintained engine is
small (usually less than one percent of the charge). All these effects reduce the
cylinder pressure during the latter stages of compression, during combustion,
and during expansion below the value that would result if crevice and leakage
effects were absent.
INCOMPLETE COMBUSTION:
DYNAMOMETER
T=Fb
The power delivered by the engine and absorbed by the dynamometer is the
product of torque and angular speed:
P = 2π NT
The value of engine power measured as described above is called brake power.
This power is the usable power delivered by the engine to the load.
Types of dynamometer:
• Proxy dynamometer
• Fan dynamometer
• Water wheel dynamometer
• Eddy current dynamometer
• Electric current dynamometer
TESTING FOR INDICATED LOAD:
ISENTROPIC EXPANSION:
The process in which heat is supplied to the system by keeping the pressure
constant is called constant pressure heat addition.
In this process the heat is supplied to the system in two steps. First at constant
pressure while in second step heat is added isochorically. This type of heat
addition is employed in Dual combustion cycle.