Internal Combustion Engines: The Worst Form of Vehicle Propulsion - Except For All The Other Forms
Internal Combustion Engines: The Worst Form of Vehicle Propulsion - Except For All The Other Forms
Internal Combustion Engines: The Worst Form of Vehicle Propulsion - Except For All The Other Forms
Worst Form of Vehicle Propulsion Except for All the Other Forms
A primer on IC engines
and their alternatives
Paul D. Ronney
Deparment of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering
University of Southern California
http://ronney.usc.edu/WhyICEngines-expanded.ppt
Outline
Automotive engines
Summary
Part 1:
Automotive engines:
how and why
Introduction
Classification of ICEs
Definition of an ICE: a heat engine in which the heat source is
a combustible mixture that also serves as the working fluid
The working fluid in turn is used either to
Produce shaft work by pushing on a piston or turbine blade
that in turn drives a rotating shaft or
Creates a high-momentum fluid that is used directly for
propulsive force
Gasoline-fueled
reciprocating piston
engine
Diesel-fueled
reciprocating piston
engine
Gas turbine
Rocket
IS NOT
Steam power plant
Solar power plant
Nuclear power plant
Non-steady
Premixed-charge
Fuel and air are mixed before/during compression
Usually ignited with spark after compression
Turboshaft
All shaft work to drive propeller,
generator, rotor (helicopter)
Two-stroke
One complete thermodynamic cycle
per revolution of engine
Turbofan
Part shaft, part jet "ducted propeller"
Four-stroke
One complete thermodynamic cycle
per two revolutions of engine
Turbojet
All jet except for work needed to
drive compressor
Ramjet
No compressor or turbine
Use high Mach no. ram effect for compression
Rocket
Carries both fuel and oxidant
Jet power only, no shaft work
Non-premixed charge
Only air is compressed,
fuel is injected into cylinder after compression
Two-stroke
One complete thermodynamic cycle
per revolution of engine
Four-stroke
One complete thermodynamic cycle
per two revolutions of engine
Solid fuel
Fuel and oxidant are premixed
and put inside combustion chamber
Liquid fuel
Fuel and oxidant are initially separated
and pumped into combustion chamber
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O2 + sunlight NO2 + O3
(brown) (irritating)
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Majority of power is used to overcome air resistance smaller, more aerodynamic vehicles beneficial
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Worst problems: cold start, transients, old or out-oftune vehicles - 90% of pollution generated by 10% of
vehicles
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Larger engines
Faster-rotating engines
Turbocharge / supercharge
Avoid stop/start cycle of reciprocating piston engines - how?
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Turbofan
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Hydrogen storage
Cryogenic (very cold, -424F) liquid, low density (14x lower than water)
Compressed gas: weight of tank 15x greater than weight of fuel
Borohydride solutions
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Do you want to drive this car every day (but never at night?)
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Alternative #5 - nuclear
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Part 2:
The nitty gritty
Power tells you how fast you can climb the hill
Torque can be increased by transmission (e.g. 2:1 gear ratio
ideally multiplies torque by 2)
N(revolutionsperminute, RPM)xTorque(infootpounds)
P(inhorsepower)
5252
Power cant be increased by transmission; in fact because of
friction and other losses, power will decrease in transmission
Power tells how fast you can accelerate or how fast you can
climb a hill, but power to torque ratio ~ N tells you what gear
ratios youll need to do the job
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Power = th Q= th mfuel QR = th
QR
1+ f
air = v airVd N /n
m
Poweroutput
th = thermalefficiency
fuel QR
m
air (actual)
m
v = volumetricefficiency
air (theoretical)
m
f
a
m
f
m
N
n
QR
Vd
air
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Fuel properties
Fuel
Heating
value, QR
(J/kg)
f at stoichiometric
Gasoline
43 x 106
0.0642
Methane
50 x 106
0.0550
Methanol
20 x 106
0.104
Ethanol
27 x 106
0.0915
Coal
34 x 106
0.0802
Paper
17 x 106
0.122
Fruit
Loops
16 x 106
120 x 106
0.0283
82,000,000
Hydrogen
U235
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Volumetric efficiency
Volumetric efficiency ( v) = (mass of air actually drawn into cylinder) /
(mass of air that ideally could be drawn into cylinder)
air (measured)
m
v
airVd N /n
where air is at ambient = Pambient/RTambient and R - 287 J/kgK for air
Volumetric efficiency indicates how well the engine breathes - what
lowers v below 100%?
Pressure
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Example
How much power does a 5.7 liter (= 0.0057 m3) Hemi
4-stroke (n = 2) gasoline engine at 6000 RPM (N =
100/sec) with thermal efficiency th = 30% = 0.30 and
volumetric efficiency v = 85% = 0.85 generate?
1.18kg
0.286kg
3 100 1
0.0057m
=
(
)
3
m
sec 2
sec
0.286kg
0.0642 4.3 10 7 J
air f
m
Power = th
QR = (0.30) sec
1+ f
1+ 0.0642
kg
hp
= 2.22 10 5W
= 298hp
746W
air = v airVd N /n = (0.85)
m
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http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/engine.swf
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Animation: http://auto.howstuffworks.com/engine3.htm
Intake (piston
moving down,
intake valve open,
exhaust valve
closed)
Compression
(piston moving
up, both valves
closed)
Expansion
(piston moving
down, both
valves closed)
Exhaust (piston
moving up, intake
valve closed,
exhaust valve open)
Note: ideally combustion occurs in zero time when piston is at the top of its travel between the
compression and expansion strokes
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Throttling
When you need less than the maximum torque available from
a premixed-charge engine (which is most of the time), a
throttle is used to control torque & power
Throttling adjusts torque output by reducing intake density
through decrease in pressure Throttling loss significant at
light loads (see next page)
Control of fuel/air ratio can adjust torque, but cannot provide
sufficient range of control - misfire problems with lean
mixtures
Diesel - nonpremixed-charge - use fuel/air ratio control - no
misfire limit - no throttling needed
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Throttling
0.9
0.85
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
Double-click plot
To open Excel chart
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
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Throttling
Another way to reduce throttling losses: close off some
cylinders when low power demand
http://www.gm.com:80/experience/technology/news/2006/2007_powertrain_
051806.jsp
Many auto magazines suggest this will cut fuel usage in half,
as though engines use fuel based only on displacement, not
RPM (N) or intake manifold pressure - more realistic articles
report 8 - 10% improvement in efficiency
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http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/rotary-engine-exploded.swf
Source:
http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/rotary-engine-animation.swf
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Higher compression
ratio possible because
no knock (only air is
compressed)
No throttling losses
since always operated at
atmospheric intake
pressure
http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/diesel2.swf
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Air only
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So what wrong with operating at a maximum fuel to air ratio a little lean
of stoichiometric?
That reduces maximum power, since youre not burning every
molecule of O2 in the cylinder. Remember - O2 molecules take up a
lot more space in the cylinder that fuel molecules do (since each O2
is attached to 3.77 N2 molecules), so it behooves you to burn every
last O2 molecule if you want maximum power. So because of the
mixing time as well as the need to run overall lean, Diesels have
less power for a given displacement / weight / size / etc.
So is the only advantage of the Diesel the better efficiency at part-load
due to absence of throttling loss?
No, you also can go to higher compression ratios, which increases
efficiency at any load. This helps alleviate the problem that slower
burning in Diesels means lower inherent efficiency (more burning at
increasing cylinder volume)
Why can the compression ratio be higher in the Diesel engine?
Because you dont have nearly as severe problems with knock.
Thats because you compress only air, then inject fuel when you
want it to burn. In the premixed-charge case, the mixture being
compressed can explode (since its fuel + air) if you compress it too
much
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Conservation!
Combined cycles: use hot exhaust from ICE to heat water for
conventional steam cycle - can achieve > 60% efficiency but not
practical for vehicles - too much added volume & weight
Natural gas
4x cheaper than electricity, 2x cheaper than gasoline or diesel for
same energy
Somewhat cleaner than gasoline or diesel, but no environmental
silver bullet
Low energy storage density - 4x lower than gasoline or diesel
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Use intake temperature increment via exhaust heat transfer to reduce air
density, thus IMEP/torque/power
IMEPg =
Pintake
th,i,g v fQR = intake th,i,g v fQR
RTintake
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Test apparatus
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Results
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TPCE performance
1.2
Natural gas
Gasoline
Theory
1.15
10
1.1
1
1.05
Throttled engine
TPCE engine
1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
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