Lec9 PDF
Lec9 PDF
Lec9 PDF
Lecture 9
Instructor: Santanu De
NL – 302, Northern Lab
Ph: 6478, Email: sde@iitk.ac.in
Office hour: F 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. or by appointment
With models for each of these processes, a simulation of a complete engine cycle can be built up
which can be analyzed to provide information on engine performance.
These model cycles are called air standard cycles.
In an air standard cycles, a certain mass of air operates in a complete thermodynamic cycle, where
heat is added or rejected with external heat reservoirs and all the process in the cycle is reversible.
The three air standard cycles that model the IC engines are:
Otto cycle (approximation of SI engine)
Diesel cycle (approximation of CI engine)
Limited pressure cycle or Mixed cycle or Dual cycle
Difference between Air Standard Cycles and IC Engine Cycle
The processes of internal combustion engine is not reversible, where as air standard cycle processes
are reversible.
In internal combustion engine air-fuel mixture act as the working fluid. In air standard cycle air is
considered to be the working fluid, with assumption of ideal gas.
In internal combustion engine the individual processes can’t be distinctly identifiable, they always
overlap. In air standard cycle the processes are distinctly identifiable with no overlap.
In internal combustion engine the working fluid’s specific heat changes with pressure and
temperature, where as in air standard cycle it is assumed that air’s specific heat remain constant.
Otto Cycle
Thus the efficiency of air standard Otto cycle is a function of compression ratio only. The higher the
compression ratio the higher the efficiency.
The compression ratio can not be increased beyond a certain limit because of noisy and destructive
combustion phenomenon detonation.
Diesel Cycle
Compression ratio
Cut-off ratio
As rk >1 the is also greater than unity. Therefore the efficiency of Diesel cycle is less than
Otto cycle for same compression ratio.
Limited Pressure Cycle, Mixed Cycle or Dual Cycle
The air standard diesel cycle does not simulate exactly the pressure volume variation in an actual CI
engine, where the fuel injection is started before the end of the compression stroke.
A closer approximation to CI engine is Dual cycle, in which some part of the heat is added to air at
constant volume and remainder at constant pressure.
Dual cycle contains two reversible adiabatic, one reversible isobar and two reversible isochors
process.
Dual Cycle
Otto, Diesel and dual cycle for same maximum pressure and temperature
Thus, the peak pressure in the engine is substantially below the fuel-air cycle peak pressure value,
because combustion continues until well after TDC, when the cylinder volume is much greater than
the clearance volume.
After peak pressure, expansion stroke pressures in the engine are higher than fuel-air cycle values in
the absence of other loss mechanisms, because less work has been extracted from the cylinder gases.
Observations:
P-V diagram shows sharp edges
i.e., valves open/close instantaneously at dead centres
Actual cycle
Actual Case:
Inlet and Exhaust Valves open/close before and after dead centres
Mechanical Factor
Dynamic Factor of Gas Flow
Every Corner in
the P-V diagram is
ROUNDED
Actual Valve Timing Diagram of a Four-Stroke Spark Ignition
Engine
IV opens 200 before TDC.
Po Pintake
Pintake
Pintake
Compressor
Pintake
1. TDC
2. BDC
Conventional engines operate at low rpms, with idle and part load important
High performance engines operate at high rpms at WOT, with power and
volumetric efficiency important
At high engine speeds, less time available for fresh gas intake so need more
crank angles to get high volumetric efficiency large valve overlap
At low engine speed and part throttle valve overlap is minimized by reducing
the angle duration for valves staying open.
Variable Valve Timing used to obtain optimum performance over wide range
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