Advance IC Engine Assignment - 81,82,84
Advance IC Engine Assignment - 81,82,84
Advance IC Engine Assignment - 81,82,84
Constructors of gasoline engines are faced with higher and higher requirements as regards to
ecological issues and an increase in engine efficiency at a simultaneous decrease in fuel
consumption. Satisfaction of these requirements is possible owing to the recognition of the
phenomena occurring inside the engine cylinder, the choice of suitable optimal parameters of the
fuel injection process, and the determination of the geometrical shapes of the combustion chamber
and the piston head. All these parameters indeed have a considerable impact on the improvement
of gasoline engines performance, and they increase their efficiency.
The increase in the engine efficiency is basically the result of the change in the fuel supply method,
that is by proper regulation of the petrol-air mixture composition depending on the rotational speed
and load. This is why the lean mixture combustion in the gasoline engine. Further lowering of the
temperature during the development of the fuel-air mixture, which is an outcome of the heat being
taken away from the evaporated spout by the surrounding air, makes it possible to increase the
compression ratio, which translates to the increase of the ideal efficiency.
A stratified charge engine is a type of internal combustion engine, used in automobiles, in which the
fuel is injected into the cylinder just before ignition. This allows for higher compression ratios
without "knock," and leaner air/fuel ratio than in conventional internal combustion engines.
Conventionally, a four-stroke (petrol or
gasoline) Otto cycle engine is fuelled by
drawing a mixture of air and fuel into the
combustion chamber during the intake stroke.
This produces a homogeneous charge: a
homogeneous mixture of air and fuel, which is
ignited by a spark plug at a predetermined
moment near the top of the compression
stroke.
In a homogeneous charge system, the air/fuel
ratio is kept very close to stoichiometric,
meaning it contains the exact amount of air
necessary for a complete combustion of the fuel. This gives stable combustion, but it places an
upper limit on the engine's efficiency: any attempt to improve fuel economy by running a lean
mixture with a homogeneous charge results in unstable combustion; this impacts on power and
emissions, notably of nitrogen oxides or NOx.
Period t1 from the fuel injection moment to contact of the stream with the piston head, including
air resistance
Period t2 from the moment of entry into curvature of the piston head to the half-length of the
curvature, including frictional resistance between the fuel stream and the piston head
Period t3 from the half-length of the piston head curvature to the moment when the fuel stream
exits the head, including both frictional and air resistances for the evaporating fuel
Period t4 from exit the curvature of the piston head to the moment when the fuel stream reaches
the sparking plug points.
Advantages
Direct fuelling of petrol engines offers considerable advantages over port-fuelling, a type of fuel
injection in which the fuel injectors are placed in the intake ports, giving homogeneous charges.
Powerful electronic management systems mean that there is no significant cost penalty. With the
further impetus of tightening emissions legislation, the motor industry in Europe and North America
has now almost switched completely to direct fuelling for the new petrol engines it is introducing.
High compression ratio
First, a higher mechanical compression ratio (or, with super-charged or turbo-charged engines,
maximum combustion pressure) may be used for better thermodynamic efficiency. Since fuel is not
present in the combustion chamber until virtually the point at which combustion is required to
begin, there is no risk of pre-ignition or engine knock.
Lean burn
The engine may also run on a much leaner overall air/fuel ratio, using stratified charge, in which a
small charge of a rich fuel mixture is ignited first and used to improve combustion of a larger charge
of a lean fuel mixture.
Disadvantages
Disadvantages include:
Charge stratification can also be achieved where there is no 'in cylinder' stratification: the inlet
mixture can be so lean that it is unable to be ignited by the limited energy provided by a
conventional spark plug. This exceptionally lean mixture can, however, be ignited by the use of a
conventional mixture strength of 12-15:1, in the case of a petrol fuelled engine, being fed into a
small combustion chamber adjacent to and connected to the main lean-mixture chamber. The large
flame front from this burning mixture is sufficient to combust the charge. It can be seen from this
method of charge stratification that the lean charge is 'burnt' and the engine utilising this form of
stratification is no longer subject to ' knock' or uncontrolled combustion. The fuel being burnt in the
lean charge is therefore not 'knock' or octane restricted. This type of stratification therefore can
utilise a wide variety of fuels; the specific energy output being dependent only on the calorific value
of the fuel.
A relatively rich air/fuel mixture is directed to the spark-plug using multi-hole injectors. This mixture
is sparked, giving a strong, even and predictable flame-front. This in turn results in a high-quality
combustion of the much weaker mixture elsewhere in the cylinder.
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