Internal Combustion Engines: The Worst Form of Vehicle Propulsion - Except For All The Other Forms

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Internal Combustion Engines: The

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

Download this presentation:

http://ronney.usc.edu/WhyICEngines-expanded.ppt

Outline

Automotive engines

Definition of Internal Combustion Engines (ICEs)


Types of ICEs
History and evolution of ICEs
Things you need to know before
Gas turbines
What are the alternatives to ICEs?

The nitty gritty

How they work


Why theyre designed that way
Gasoline vs. diesel
Practical perspective

Summary

Part 1:
Automotive engines:
how and why

Introduction

Hydrocarbon-fueled ICEs are the power plant of choice for vehicles


in the power range from 5 Watts to 100,000,000 Watts, and have
been for 100 years
There is an unlimited amount of inaccurate, misleading and/or
dogmatic information about ICEs
This seminars messages

Why ICEs so ubiquitous


Why it will be so difficult to replace them with another technology
What you will have to do if you want to replace them

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

What is / is not an ICE?


IS

Gasoline-fueled
reciprocating piston
engine
Diesel-fueled
reciprocating piston
engine
Gas turbine
Rocket

IS NOT
Steam power plant
Solar power plant
Nuclear power plant

ICE family tree


Internal Combustion Engines
Steady
Gas Turbine
Uses compressor and turbine,
not piston-cylinder

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

Largest internal combustion engine


Wartsila-Sulzer RTA96-C turbocharged two-stroke diesel, built in Finland,
used in container ships
14 cylinder version: weight 2300 tons; length 89 feet; height 44 feet; max.
power 108,920 hp @ 102 rpm; max. torque 5,608,312 ft lb @ 102 RPM
Power/weight = 0.024 hp/lb
Also one of the most efficient IC engines: 51%

Most powerful internal combustion engine


Wartsila-Sulzer RTA96-C is the largest IC engine, but the Space Shuttle
Solid Rocket Boosters are the most powerful ( 42 million horsepower (32
hp/lb); not shaft power but kinetic energy of exhaust stream)
Most powerful shaft-power engine: Siemens SGT5-8000H stationary gas
turbine (340 MW = 456,000 HP) (0.52 hp/lb) used for electrical power
generation

Smallest internal combustion engine


Cox Tee Dee 010
Application:
model airplanes
Weight:
0.49 oz.
Displacement:
0.00997 in3
(0.163 cm3)
RPM:
30,000
Power:
5 watts
Ignition:
Glow plug
Typical fuel: castor oil (10 - 20%),
nitromethane (0 - 50%), balance
methanol
Good power/weight (0.22 hp/lb) but poor performance
Low efficiency (< 5%)
Emissions & noise unacceptable for many applications

10

History of automotive engines


1859 - Oil discovered at Drakes Well, Titusville,
Pennsylvania (20 barrels per day) - 40 year supply
1876 - Premixed-charge 4-stroke engine - Otto
1st practical ICE
Power: 2 hp; Weight: 1250 pounds
Comp. ratio = 4 (knock limited), 14% efficiency
(theory 38%)
Today CR = 9 (still knock limited), 30% efficiency
(theory 55%)

1897 - Nonpremixed-charge engine - Diesel - higher


efficiency due to
Higher compression ratio (no knock problem)
No throttling loss - use fuel/air ratio to control power

1901 - Spindletop Dome, east Texas - Lucas #1


gusher produces 100,000 barrels per day - ensures
that 2nd Industrial Revolution will be fueled by
oil, not coal or wood - 40 year supply

11

History of automotive engines


1921 - Tetraethyl lead anti-knock additive discovered at
General Motors

Enabled higher compression ratio (thus more power, better


efficiency) in Otto-type engines

1952 - A. J. Haagen-Smit, Caltech


NO + UHC +
(from exhaust)

O2 + sunlight NO2 + O3
(brown) (irritating)

(UHC = unburned hydrocarbons)

1960s - Emissions regulations

Detroit wont believe it


Initial stop-gap measures - lean mixture, EGR, retard spark
Poor performance & fuel economy

1973 & 1979 - The energy crises


Detroit takes a bath

12

History of automotive engines


1975 - Catalytic converters, unleaded fuel

Detroit forced to buy technology


More aromatics (e.g., benzene) in gasoline - high octane but
carcinogenic, soot-producing

1980s - Microcomputer control of engines

Tailor operation for best emissions, efficiency, ...

1990s - Reformulated gasoline

Reduced need for aromatics, cleaner(?)


... but higher cost, lower miles per gallon
Then we found that MTBE pollutes groundwater!!!
Alternative oxygenated fuel additive - ethanol - very attractive
to powerful senators from farm states

13

History of automotive engines


2000s - hybrid vehicles

Use small gasoline engine operating at maximum power


(most efficient way to operate) or turned off if not needed
Use generator/batteries/motors to make/store/use surplus
power from gasoline engine
More efficient, but much more equipment on board - not clear
if fuel savings justify extra cost
Plug-in hybrid: half-way between conventional hybrid and
electric vehicle
Recent study in a major consumer magazine: only 1 of 7
hybrids tested show a cost benefit over a 5 year ownership
period if tax incentives removed
Dolly Parton: You wouldnt believe how much it costs to look
this cheap
Paul Ronney: You wouldnt believe how much energy some
people spend to save a little fuel

14

Things you need to understand before ...


you invent the zero-emission, 100 mpg 1000 hp engine,
revolutionize the automotive industry and shop for your
retirement home on the French Riviera
Room for improvement - factor of less than 2 in efficiency
Ideal Otto cycle engine with compression ratio = 9: 55%
Real engine: 25 - 30%
Differences because of
Throttling losses
Throttling
Heat losses
Heat
Friction losses
Friction
Slow burning
Slow
Incomplete combustion is a very minor effect

Majority of power is used to overcome air resistance smaller, more aerodynamic vehicles beneficial

15

Things you need to understand before ...


Room for improvement - infinite in pollutants
Pollutants are a non-equilibrium effect

Burn: Fuel + O2 + N2 H2O + CO2 + N2 + CO + UHC + NO


Burn:
OK OK(?) OK Bad Bad Bad
Expand: CO + UHC + NO frozen at high levels
Expand:
With slow expansion, no heat loss:
With
CO + UHC + NO H2O + CO2 + N2

...but how to slow the expansion and eliminate heat loss?

Worst problems: cold start, transients, old or out-oftune vehicles - 90% of pollution generated by 10% of
vehicles

16

Things you need to understand before ...


Room for improvement - very little in power
IC engines are air processors
Fuel takes up little space
Fuel
Air flow = power
Air
Limitation on air flow due to
Limitation

Choked flow past intake valves


Friction loss, mechanical strength - limits RPM
Slow burn

Larger engines
Faster-rotating engines
Turbocharge / supercharge
Avoid stop/start cycle of reciprocating piston engines - how?

How to increase air flow?


How

17

Basic gas turbine cycle

18

Turbofan

19

Why gas turbines?

GE CT7-8 turboshaft (used in


helicopters)
http://www.geae.com/engines/commerci
al/ct7/ct7-8.html
Compressor/turbine stages: 6/4
Diameter 26, Length 48.8 = 426 liters
= 5.9 hp/liter
Dry Weight 537 lb, max. power 2,520 hp
(power/wt = 4.7 hp/lb)
Pressure ratio at max. power: 21 (ratio
per stage = 211/6 = 1.66)
Specific fuel consumption at max.
power: 0.450 (units not given; if lb/hp-hr
then corresponds to 29.3% efficiency)

Cummins QSK60-2850 4-stroke 60.0


liter (3,672 in3) V-16 2-stage
turbocharged diesel (used in mining
trucks)
http://www.everytime.cummins.com/asset
s/pdf/4087056.pdf
2.93 m long x 1.58 m wide x 2.31 m high =
10,700 liters = 0.27 hp/liter
Dry weight 21,207 lb, 2850 hp at 1900
RPM (power/wt = 0.134 hp/lb = 35x lower
than gas turbine)
Volume compression ratio ??? (not
given)

20

Why gas turbines?

Ballard HY-80 Fuel cell engine


http://www.ballard.com/resources/transport
Lycoming IO-720 11.8 liter (720 cu in) 4ation/XCS-HY-80_Trans.pdf (no longer valid
stroke 8-cyl. gasoline engine
link!)
(http://www.lycoming.com/engines/series/
Volume 220 liters = 0.41 hp/liter
pdfs/Specialty%20insert.pdf)
Total volume 23 x 34 x 46 = 589 liters = 91 hp, 485 lb. (power/wt = 0.19 hp/lb)
48% efficiency (fuel to electricity)
0.67 hp/liter
Uses hydrogen only - NOT hydrocarbons
400 hp @ 2650 RPM
Does NOT include electric drive system (
Dry weight 600 lb. (power/wt = 0.67 hp/lb =
0.40 hp/lb) at 90% electrical to mechanical
7x lower than gas turbine)
efficiency
Volume compression ratio 8.7:1 (=
(http://www.gm.com/company/gmability/adv
pressure ratio 20.7 if isentropic)
_tech/images/fact_sheets/hywire.html) (no
longer valid)
Fuel cell + motor overall 0.13 hp/lb at 43%
efficiency, not including H2 storage
21

Why gas turbines?

Why does gas turbine have much higher power/weight &


power/volume than recips? More air can be processed since
steady flow, not start/stop of reciprocating-piston engines

More air more fuel can be burned


More fuel more heat release
More heat more work (if thermal efficiency similar)

What are the disadvantages?

Compressor is a dynamic device that makes gas move from low


pressure to high pressure without a positive seal like a
piston/cylinder

Requires very precise aerodynamics


Requires blade speeds sound speed, otherwise gas flows back to
low P faster than compressor can push it to high P
Each stage can provide only 2:1 or 3:1 pressure ratio - need many
stages for large pressure ratio

Since steady flow, each component sees a constant temperature


- at end of combustor - turbine stays hot continuously and must
rotate at high speeds (high stress)
Severe materials and cooling engineering required (unlike recip,
where components only feel average gas temperature during cycle)
Turbine inlet temperature limit 1600K = 2420F - limits fuel input

22

Why gas turbines?

As a result, turbines require more maintenance & are more


expensive for same power (so never used in automotive
applications but is used in modern military tanks, because of
power/volume, NOT power/weight)
Simple intro to gas turbines:
http://geae.com/education/engines101/

23

Alternative #1 - external combustion


Examples: steam engine, Stirling cycle engine

Use any fuel as the heat source


Use any working fluid (high , e.g. helium, provides better efficiency)

Heat transfer, gasoline engine

Heat transfer per unit area (q/A) = k(dT/dx)


Turbulent mixture inside engine: k 100 kno turbulence
2.5 W/mK
dT/dx T/ x 1500K / 0.02 m
q/A 187,500 W/m2

Combustion: q/A = YfQRST = (10 kg/m3) x 0.067 x (4.5 x 107 J/kg) x


2 m/s = 60,300,000 W/m2 - 321x higher!
CONCLUSION: HEAT TRANSFER IS TOO SLOW!!!
Thats why 10 large gas turbine engines large (1 gigawatt) coalfueled electric power plant
k = gas thermal conductivity, T = temperature, x = distance, = density, Yf =
fuel mass fraction, QR = fuel heating value, ST = turbulent flame speed in
engine

24

Alternative #2 - Electric Vehicles (EVs)

Why not generate electricity in a large central power plant


and distribute to charge batteries to power electric motors?
EV NiMH battery - 26.4 kW-hours, 1147 pounds = 1.83 x 105
J/kg (http://www.gmev.com/power/power.htm)
Gasoline (and other hydrocarbons): 4.3 x 107 J/kg
Even at 30% efficiency (gasoline) vs. 90% (batteries),
gasoline has 78 times higher energy/weight than batteries!
1 gallon of gasoline 481 pounds of batteries for same
energy delivered to the wheels
Other issues with electric vehicles

"Zero emissions ??? - EVs export pollution


Replacement cost of batteries
Environmental cost of battery materials
Possible advantage: EVs make smaller, lighter, more
streamlined cars acceptable to consumers

25

Zero emission electric vehicles

26

Alternative #3 - Hydrogen fuel cell


Ballard HY-80 Fuel cell engine
(power/wt = 0.19 hp/lb)
48% efficient (fuel to electricity)
MUST use hydrogen (from where?)
Requires large amounts of platinum
catalyst - extremely expensive
Does NOT include electric drive system
( 0.40 hp/lb thus fuel cell + motor
at 90% electrical to mechanical efficiency)
Overall system: 0.13 hp/lb at 43% efficiency (hydrogen)
Conventional engine: 0.5 hp/lb at 30% efficiency (gasoline)
Conclusion: fuel cell engines are only marginally more efficient,
much heavier for the same power, and require hydrogen which is
very difficult and potentially dangerous to store on a vehicle
Prediction: even if we had an unlimited free source of hydrogen
and a perfect way of storing it on a vehicle, we would still burn it,
not use it in a fuel cell

27

Hydrogen storage

Hydrogen is a great fuel

High energy density (1.2 x 108 J/kg, 3x hydrocarbons)


Much faster reaction rates than hydrocarbons ( 10 - 100x at same T)
Excellent electrochemical properties in fuel cells

But how to store it???

Cryogenic (very cold, -424F) liquid, low density (14x lower than water)
Compressed gas: weight of tank 15x greater than weight of fuel
Borohydride solutions

Palladium - Pd/H = 164 by weight


Carbon nanotubes - many claims, few facts
Long-chain hydrocarbon (CH2)x: (Mass C)/(mass H) = 6, plus C atoms
add 94.1 kcal of energy release to 57.8 for H2!

NaBH4 + 2H2O NaBO2 (Borax) + 3H2


(mass solution)/(mass fuel) 9.25

MORAL: By far the best way to store hydrogen is to attach it to carbon


atoms and make hydrocarbons, even if youre not going to use the
carbon as fuel!

28

Alternative #4 - Solar vehicle

Arizona, high noon, mid summer: solar flux 1000 W/m2


Gasoline engine, 20 mi/gal, 60 mi/hr, thermal power = (60 mi/hr / 20
mi/gal) x (6 lb/gal) x (kg / 2.2 lb) x (4.3 x 107 J/kg) x (hr / 3600 sec) =
97 kilowatts
Need 100 m2 collector 32 ft x 32 ft - lots of air drag, what about
underpasses, nighttime, bad weather, northern/southern latitudes,
etc.?

Do you want to drive this car every day (but never at night?)
29

Alternative #5 - nuclear

Who are we kidding ???


Higher energy density though

U235 fission: 8.2 x 1013 J/kg 2 million x hydrocarbons!


Radioactive decay much less, but still much higher than
hydrocarbon fuel

30

Part 2:
The nitty gritty

Power and torque


Engine performance is specified in both in terms of power and
engine torque - which is more important?
Wheel torque = engine torque x gear ratio tells you whether you
can climb the hill
Gear ratio in transmission typically 3:1 or 4:1 in 1st gear, 1:1 in
highest gear; gear ratio in differential typically 3:1

Ratio of engine revolutions to wheel revolutions varies from 12:1 in


lowest gear to 3:1 in highest gear

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

32

How much power does an engine make?


air f
m

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

Fuel mass fraction in mixture (---)


Air mass flow rate (kg/s)
Fuel mass flow rate (kg/s)
Engine rotational speed (revolutions per second)
Parameter = 1 for 2-stroke engine, = 2 for 4-stroke
Heat transfer rate (Watts)
Fuel heating value (J/kg)
Displacement volume (m3)
Air density (= 1.18 kg/m3 at 298K, 1 atm)

33

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

Probably about the same as


paper

120 x 106

0.0283

82,000,000

Hydrogen
U235

34

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

drops in intake system (e.g. throttling) & intake valves


Temperature rise due to heating of air as it flows through intake
system
Volume occupied by fuel
Non-ideal valve timing
Choking (air flow reaching speed of sound) in part of intake system
having smallest area (passing intake valves)
See figure on p. 217 of Heywood (Internal Combustion Engine
Fundamentals, McGraw-Hill, 1988) for good summary of all these effects

35

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

36

4-stroke premixed-charge piston engine

Most common type of IC engine


Simple, easy to manufacture,
inexpensive materials
Good power/weight ratio
Excellent flexibility - works
reasonably well over a wide range
of engine speeds and loads
Rapid response to changing
speed/load demand
Acceptable emissions
Weaknesses

Fuel economy (compared to Diesel,


due lower compression ratio &
throttling losses at part-load)
Power/weight (compared to gas
turbine)

http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/engine.swf

37

4-stroke premixed-charge piston engine

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

38

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

39

Throttling

Throttling loss increases from zero at wide-open throttle (WOT) to about


half of all fuel usage at idle (other half is friction loss)
At typical highway cruise condition ( 1/3 of torque at WOT), about 15%
loss due to throttling (side topic: throttleless premixed-charge engines)
Throttling isnt always bad, when you take your foot off the gas pedal &
shift to a lower gear to reduce vehicle speed, youre using throttling loss
(negative torque) and high N to maximize negative power
1

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

40

Throttling
Another way to reduce throttling losses: close off some
cylinders when low power demand

Cadillac had a 4-6-8 engine in the 1981 but it was a mechanical


disaster
GM uses a 4-8 Active fuel management (previously called
Displacement On Demand) engine

http://www.gm.com:80/experience/technology/news/2006/2007_powertrain_
051806.jsp

Mercedes has had 4-8 Cylinder deactivation engines for


European markets since 1998:
http://www.answers.com/topic/active%20cylinder%20control

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

41

2-stroke premixed-charge engine


Source: http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/two-stroke.swf

42

2-stroke premixed-charge engine


Most designs have fuel-air mixture
flowing first INTO CRANKCASE (?)
Fuel-air mixture must contain lubricating
oil
On down-stroke of piston
Exhaust ports are exposed &
exhaust gas flows out, crankcase is
pressurized
Reed valve prevents fuel-air mixture
from flowing back out intake
manifold
Intake ports are exposed, fresh fuelair mixture flows into intake ports
On up-stroke of piston
Intake & exhaust ports are covered
Fuel-air mixture is compressed in
cylinder
Spark & combustion occurs near top
of piston travel
Work output occurs during 1st half
of down-stroke

43

2-stroke premixed-charge engine


2-strokes gives 2x as much power since only 1 crankshaft
revolution needed for 1 complete cycle (vs. 2 revolutions for
4-strokes)
Since intake & exhaust ports are open at same time, some
fuel-air mixture flows directly out exhaust & some exhaust
gas gets mixed with fresh gas
Since oil must be mixed with fuel, oil gets burned
As a result of these factors, thermal efficiency is lower,
emissions are higher, and performance is near-optimal for a
narrower range of engine speeds compared to 4-strokes
Use primarily for small vehicles, leaf blowers, RC aircraft,
etc. where power/weight is the overriding concern

44

Rotary or Wankel engine


Uses non-cylindrical combustion chamber
Provides one complete cycle per engine revolution without short circuit flow of 2strokes (but still need some oil injected at the rotor apexes)
Simpler, fewer moving parts, higher RPM possible
Very fuel-flexible - can incorporate catalyst in combustion chamber since fresh gas
is moved into chamber rather than being continually exposed to it (as in piston
engine) - same design can use gasoline, Diesel, methanol, etc.
Very difficult to seal BOTH vertices and flat sides of rotor!
Seal longevity a problem also
Large surface area to volume ratio means more heat losses

45

http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/rotary-engine-exploded.swf

Rotary or Wankel engine

Source:

http://static.howstuffworks.com/flash/rotary-engine-animation.swf

47

4-stroke Diesel engine


Conceptually similar to 4stroke gasoline, but only
air is compressed (not
fuel-air mixture) and fuel
is injected into
combustion chamber
after air is compressed
Key advantages

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

48

Premixed vs. non-premixed charge engines

Air only

49

Comparison of GM truck engines - gasoline vs. Diesel


Recall Power (hp) = Torque (ft lb) x N (rev/min) 5252
Gasoline: Torque constant from 1000 to 6000 RPM; power ~ N
Turbo Diesel: Torque sharply peaked; much narrower range of usable N
(1000 - 3000 RPM) (Pintake not reported on website but maximum 3 atm
from other data)
Smaller, non-turbocharged gasoline engine produces almost as much
power as turbo Diesel, largely due to higher N

2006 GM Northstar 4.6 Liter V8 (LD8);


r = 10.5; variable valve timing

2006 GM Duramax 6.6 liter V8


turbocharged Diesel (LBZ); r = 16.8

52

Ronneys catechism (1/4)

Why do we throttle in a premixed charge engine despite the throttling


losses it causes?
Because we have to reduce power & torque when we dont want the
full output of the engine (which is most of the time in LA traffic, or
even on the open road)
Why dont we have to throttle in a nonpremixed charge engine?
Because we use control of the fuel to air ratio (i.e. to reduce power &
torque, we reduce the fuel for the (fixed) air mass)
Why dont we do that for the premixed charge engine and avoid throttling
losses?
Because if we try to burn lean in the premixed-charge engine, when
the equivalence ratio ( ) is reduced below about 0.7, the mixture
misfires and may stop altogether
Why isnt that a problem for the nonpremixed charge engine?
Nonpremixed-charge engines are not subject to flammability limits like
premixed-charge engines since there is a continuously range of fuelto-air ratios varying from zero in the pure air to infinite in the pure fuel,
thus someplace there is a stoichiometric ( = 1) mixture that can burn.
Such variation in does not occur in premixed-charge engines since,
by definition, is the same everywhere.

53

Ronneys catechism (2/4)

So why would anyone want to use a premixed-charge engine?


Because the nonpremixed-charge engine burns its fuel slower, since
fuel and air must mix before they can burn. This is already taken care of
in the premixed-charge engine. This means lower engine RPM and thus
less power from an engine of a given displacement
Wait - you said that the premixed-charge engine is slower burning.
Only if the mixture is too lean. If its near-stoichiometric, then its faster
because, again, mixing was already done before ignition (ideally, at
least). Recall that as drops, Tad drops proportionately, and burning
velocity (SL) drops exponentially as Tad drops
Couldnt I operate my non-premixed charge engine at overall stoichiometric
conditions to increase burning rate?
No. In nonpremixed-charge engines it still takes time to mix the pure
fuel and pure air, so (as discussed previously) burning rates, flame
lengths, etc. of nonpremixed flames are usually limited by mixing rates,
not reaction rates. Worse still, with initially unmixed reactants at overall
stoichiometric conditions, the last molecule of fuel will never find the
last molecule of air in the time available for burning in the engine - one
will be in the upper left corner of the cylinder, the other in the lower
right corner. That means unburned or partially burned fuel would be
emitted. Thats why diesel engines smoke at heavy load, when the
mixture gets too close to overall stoichiometric.

54

Ronneys catechism (3/4)

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

55

Ronneys catechism (4/4)

Why is knock so bad?


It causes intense pressure waves that rattle the piston and leads to
severe engine damage
So, why have things evolved such that small engines are usually premixedcharge, whereas large engines are nonpremixed-charge?
In small engines (lawn mowers, autos, etc.) youre usually most
concerned with getting the highest power/weight and power/volume
ratios, rather than best efficiency (fuel economy). In larger engines
(trucks, locomotives, tugboats, etc.) you dont care as much about size
and weight but efficiency is more critical
But unsteady-flow aircraft engines, even large ones, are premixed-charge,
because weight is always critical in aircraft
You got me on that one. But of course most large aircraft engines are
steady-flow gas turbines, which kill unsteady-flow engines in terms of
power/weight and power/volume.

56

Practical alternatives discussion points

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

57

Practical alternatives discussion points

Fischer-Tropsch fuels - liquid hydrocarbons from coal or natural gas


Competitive with $75/barrel oil
Cleaner than gasoline or diesel
but using coal increases greenhouse gases!
Coal : oil : natural gas = 2 : 1.5 : 1
But really, there is no way to decide what the next step is until it is
decided whether there will be a tax on CO2 emissions
Personal opinion: most important problems are (in order of priority)
Global warming
Energy independence
Environment

58

Summary of advantages of ICEs

Moral - hard to beat liquid-fueled internal combustion


engines for

Power/weight & power/volume of engine


Energy/weight (4.3 x 107 J/kg assuming only fuel, not air,
is carried) & energy/volume of liquid hydrocarbon fuel
Distribution & handling convenience of liquids
Relative safety of hydrocarbons compared to hydrogen or
nuclear energy

Conclusion #1: IC engines are the worst form of vehicle


propulsion, except for all the other forms
Conclusion #2: Oil costs way too much, but its still
very cheap

59

Sidebar: Throttleless Premixed-Charge Engine (TPCE)


E. J. Durbin & P. D. Ronney, U.S. Patent No. 5,184,592
http://ronney.usc.edu/Research/TPCE/TPCE_patent.pdf

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

Keep Pintake (= P2 in our notation) at ambient (no throttling loss)


Increasing Tintake = (T2 in our notation) leads to leaner lean misfire limit
(lower f) - use air/fuel ratio AND Tintake to control power/torque

Lean limit corresponds to constant Tad (= T4 in our notation)


T4 = T3 + fQR/Cv = T2r-1 + fQR/Cv can get lean-limit T4 through various
combinations of T2 & f
Higher T2 & lower f lower IMEP
Higher Tintake increases knock tendency, but
Lean mixtures much less susceptible to knock
Alternative fuels (natural gas, methanol, ethanol) better
Retrofit to existing engines possible by changing only intake, exhaust, &
control systems

60

TPCE operating limitations

61

Test apparatus

Production 4-cylinder engines


Maximum Brake Torque (MBT) spark timing
For simplicity, electrical heating, not exhaust heat transfer in
test engine

62

Results

Substantially improved fuel economy (up to 16 %) compared


to throttled engine at same power & RPM
Emissions
Untreated NOx performance
< 0.8 grams per kW-hr
> 10 x lower than throttled engine )
< 0.2 grams per mile for 15 hp road load @ 55 mi/hr
CO and UHC comparable to throttled engine
May need only inexpensive 2-way oxidizing catalyst for CO &
UHC in TPCE engines

All improvements nearly independent of RPM


Good knock performance of lean mixtures, even with
gasoline, instrumental to TPCE performance

63

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

Engine load (fraction of maximum)

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

Engine load (fraction of maximum)

64

TPCE implementation concept

Branched intake manifold with diverter valve to control intake


T

65

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