Advanced Internal Combustion Engine
Advanced Internal Combustion Engine
lean mixture may cause an oxidizing action on the hot exhaust valve and
leads to failure.
v) Air-Fuel Ratio for Acceleration
Even during normal running, sometimes more power is required for a short
period such as to accelerate the vehicle for overtaking etc. During this
period rich mixture is required.
There is a certain time interval between instant of spark and instant where
there is a noticeable rise in pressure due to combustion. This time lag is
called IGNITION LAG. Ignition lag is the time interval in the process of
chemical reaction during which molecules get heated up to self-ignition
temperature , get ignited and produce a self-propagating nucleus of flame.
The ignition lag is generally expressed in terms of crank angle (q1). The
period of ignition lag is shown by path ab.
Ignition lag is very small and lies between 0.00015 to 0.0002 seconds. An
ignition lag of0.002 seconds corresponds to 35 deg crank rotation when the
engine is running at 3000 RPM. Angle of advance increase with the speed.
This is a chemical process depending upon the nature of fuel, temperature
and pressure, proportions of exhaust gas and rate of oxidation or burning.
ii. Flame propagation stage:
Once the flame is formed at b, it should be self-sustained and must be
able to propagate through the mixture. This is possible when the rate of
heat generation by burning is greater than heat lost by flame to
surrounding. After the point b, the flame propagation is abnormally low at
the beginning as heat lost is more than heat generated. Therefore pressure
rise is also slow as mass of mixture burned is small. Therefore it is
necessary to provide angle of advance 30 to35 deg, if the peak pressure to
be attained 5-10 deg after TDC. The time required for crank to rotate
through an angle q2 is known as combustion period during which
propagation of flame takes place.
iii. After burning:
Combustion will not stop at point c but continue after attaining peak
pressure and this combustion is known as after burning. This generally
happens when the rich mixture is supplied to engine.
Coolant Temperature
iv.
Increasing the load opens the throttle valve more and thus the
density
Supercharging increase the density of the mixture
Increasing the inlet pressure increases the overall pressure during
the cycle. The high pressure end gas decreases the delay period
which increase the tendency of knocking.
Advanced spark timing: quantity of fuel burnt per cycle before and
after TDC position depends on spark timing. The temperature of
charge increases by increasing the spark advance and it increases
with rate of burning and does not allow sufficient time to the end
mixture to dissipate the heat and increase the knocking tendency
(C)TIME FACTORS
Increasing the time of exposure of the unburned mixture to auto-ignition
conditions increase the possibility of knock in SI engines.
i.
Location of sparkplug:
Engine size
Turbulence of mixture
Decreasing the turbulence of the mixture decreases the flame speed and
hence increases the tendency to knock. Turbulence depends on the design
of combustion chamber and one engine speed.
COMPOSITION FACTORS
i.
Molecular Structure
The knocking tendency is markedly affected by the type of the fuel used.
Petroleum fuels usually consist of many hydro-carbons of different
molecular structure. The structure of the fuel molecule has enormous
effect on knocking tendency. Increasing the carbon-chain increases the
knocking tendency and centralizing the carbon atoms decreases the
knocking tendency. Unsaturated hydrocarbons have less knocking
tendency than saturated hydrocarbons.
ii.
Fuel-air ratio:
The most important effect of fuel-aft ratio is on the reaction time or ignition
delay. When the mixture is nearly 10% richer than stoichiometric (fuel-air
ratio =0.08) ignition lag of the end gas is minimum and the velocity of
flame propagation is maximum. By making the mixture leaner or richer
(than F/A 0.08) the tendency to knocks decreased. A too rich mixture is
especially effective in decreasing or eliminating the knock due to longer
delay and lower temperature of compression.
iii. Humidity of air:
Increasing atmospheric humidity decreases the tendency to knock by
decreasing the reaction time of the fuel
It may be noted that these chambers are designed to obtain the objectives
namely:
i.T
This was first introduced by Ford Motor Corporation in 1908. This design has
following disadvantages.
ii.L
Requires two cam shafts (for actuating the in-let valve and exhaust
valve separately) by two cams mounted on the two cam shafts.
Very prone to detonation. There was violent detonation even at a
compression ratio of 4. This is because the average octane number in
1908 was about 40 -50.
Head Type Combustion chambers
Disadvantages:
Lack of turbulence as the air had to take two right angle turns to
enter the cylinder and in doing so much initial velocity is lost.
Extremely prone to detonation due to large flame length
and slow combustion due to lack of turbulence.
More surface-to-volume ratio and therefore more heat loss.
iii.
The drawback
Combustion
Normal combustion
Spark-ignited flame moves steadily across the combustion chamber until
the charge is fully consumed. A combustion process which is initiated
solely by a timed spark and in which the flame front moves completely
across the combustion chamber in a uniform manner at a normal velocity
Abnormal combustion
Fuel composition, engine design and operating parameters, combustion
chamber deposits may prevent occurring of the normal combustion
process. A combustion process in which a flame front may be started by
hot combustion-chamber surfaces either prior to or after spark ignition, or
a process in which some part or all of the charge may be consumed at
extremely high rates
There are two types of abnormal combustion:
Knock
Surface ignition
i.Knock
Knock is the auto ignition of the portion of fuel, air and residual gas
mixture ahead of the advancing flame that produces a noise. As the flame
propagates across combustion chamber, end gas is compressed causing
pressure, temperature and density to increase. This causes high
frequency pressure oscillations inside the cylinder that produce sharp
metallic noise called knock. Knock will not occur when the flame front
consumes the end gas before these reactions have time to cause fuel-air
mixture to auto ignite. Knock will occur if the pre combustion reactions
produce auto ignition before the flame front arrives
ii. Surface Ignition
Surface ignition is ignition of the fuel-air charge by overheated valves or
spark plugs, by glowing combustion chamber deposits or by any other
hot spot in the engine combustion chamber - it is ignition by any source
other than the spark plug. It may occur before the spark plug ignites the
charge (preignition) or after normal ignition (post ignition).
As the air velocity of air passes through the venturi section will be
maximum correspondingly the pressure will be minimum. Due to the
pressure difference between the float chamber and the throat of the
venturi, fuel is discharged from the jet to the air. To prevent the overflow of
fuel from the jet, the level of fuel in the chamber is kept at a level slightly
below the tip.
The quantity of the fuel supplied is governed by the opening of the
butterfly valve situated after the venturi tube. As the opening of the valve