9
Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…...

Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines

P M V SubbaraoProfessor

Mechanical Engineering Department

Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…...

Page 2: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Mass of Fuel per Cycle

• Accurate thermodynamic analysis of engine cycle determines the fuel to be inducted per cycle.

• This analysis cannot advocate the rate of consumption of this fuel mass with in the cycle.

• The pace and duration of fuel consumption is an essential knowledge in developing low emission and high fuel economy vehicular engines.

• Many hardware (mechatronic ) solutions along with software solutions are being continuously developed.

• Development of these solutions need a knowledge of fuel consumption vs crank angle.

Page 3: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Quasi-static Approach to Rapid Combustion

For an infinitesimal displacement of crank, d

Page 4: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Cumulative Fuel Consumption Model

• The most common method of defining cumulative combustion is with a mass fraction burned curve.

LHVm

dd

Q

MFBcombtotalf

gen

soc

,

•Mass fraction burned is the ratio of the cumulative heat release to the total heat release.• Therefore if the mass fraction burned is known as a function of crank angle, then the apparent heat release can be approximated.•When the cumulative mass fraction burned is graphed against crank angle degrees, the curve can be described using a Wiebe function

Page 5: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

The Wiebe function

• θ is crank angle degrees with θsoc corresponding to the initialization of heat release and

• Δθ corresponding to the duration of burn.

• The equation is also defined by two constants a and m which have typical values of 5 and 3 respectively.

1

exp1m

socaMFB

Page 6: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

The Actual Release of Net Heat Rate in SI Engines

Page 7: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Phases of Combustion in Homogeneous SI Engine

Crank Angle,

Sparking

Start of Combustion

End of Combustion

Page 8: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Mixture Burn Time vs Engine Speed

The time for an overall burn is:

36060

%90%90

revkN

to

General acceptable value is 50o crank angle for the overall burn

N (rpm) t90%(ms)

Standard car at idle 500 16.7

Standard car at max power 4,000 2.1

Formula car at max power 19,000 0.4

Note: To achieve such high engine speeds a formula car engine has a very short stroke and large bore.

Page 9: Control of Heat Release Rate in S.I. Engines P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Development of Models to Design & Select Hardware…

Phases of Combustion Vs Generation of Air-fuel Mixture : SI Engines

• For spark ignition engines, Mixture preparation precedes all the other engine processes.

• Metering the ambient air and fuel and forming a mixture that satisfies the requirements of the engine over its entire operating regime is pre-decided.

• The structures of fuel spray dominates the mixture preparation process.

• This also strongly affect the durations of combustion phases over a wide range of operating conditions.