Diesel
Engine
Diesel engine, any internal-combustion engine in which air is compressed
to a sufficiently high temperature to ignite diesel fuel injected into the cylinder, where
combustion and expansion actuate a piston. It converts the chemical energy
stored in the fuel into mechanical energy,
which can be used to power freight
trucks, large tractors, locomotives, and marine vessels. A limited number of
automobiles also are diesel-powered, as are some electric-power generator sets.
Diesel
combustion
The typical sequence of cycle events
in a four-stroke diesel engine involves a single intake valve, fuel-injection
nozzle, and exhaust valve, as shown here. Injected fuel is ignited by its
reaction to compressed hot air in the cylinder, a more efficient process than
that of the spark-ignition internal-combustion engine.(more) The diesel engine is
an intermittent-combustion piston-cylinder device. It operates on either a
two-stroke or
four-stroke cycle (see figure); however, unlike the
spark-ignition gasoline engine,
the diesel engine induces only air into the combustion chamber on its intake stroke.
Diesel engines are typically constructed with compression ratios in the range 14:1 to 22:1. Both two-stroke and four-stroke
engine designs can be found among engines with bores (cylinder diameters) less than 600 mm (24 inches). Engines
with bores of greater than 600 mm are almost exclusively two-stroke cycle
systems.
The diesel engine gains its energy
by burning fuel injected or sprayed into the compressed, hot air charge within
the cylinder. The air must be heated to a temperature greater than the
temperature at which the injected fuel can ignite. Fuel sprayed into air that
has a temperature higher than the “auto-ignition” temperature of the fuel
spontaneously reacts with the oxygen in the air and burns. Air temperatures are
typically in excess of 526 °C (979 °F); however, at engine start-up,
supplemental heating of the cylinders is sometimes employed, since the
temperature of the air within the cylinders is determined by both the engine’s
compression ratio and its current operating temperature. Diesel engines are sometimes called compression-ignition engines because
initiation of combustion relies on air heated by compression rather than on an
electric spark.
In a diesel engine, fuel is introduced as the
piston approaches the top dead centre of its stroke. The fuel is introduced
under high pressure either into a precombustion chamber or directly into the
piston-cylinder combustion chamber. With the exception of small, high-speed
systems, diesel engines use direct injection.
Diesel engine fuel-injection systems
are typically designed to provide injection pressures in the range of 7 to 70
megapascals (1,000 to 10,000 pounds per square inch). There are, however, a few
higher-pressure systems.
Precise control of fuel injection is
critical to the performance of a diesel engine. Since the entire combustion
process is controlled by fuel injection,
injection must begin at the correct piston position (i.e., crank angle). At
first the fuel is burned in a nearly constant-volume process while the piston
is near top dead centre. As the piston moves away from this position, fuel
injection is continued, and the combustion process then appears as a nearly
constant-pressure process.
The combustion process in a diesel
engine is heterogeneous—that is, the fuel and air are not premixed prior to
initiation of combustion. Consequently, rapid vaporization and mixing of fuel
in air is very important to thorough burning of the injected fuel. This places
much emphasis on injector nozzle design, especially in direct-injection
engines.
Engine work is obtained during the power
stroke. The power stroke includes both the constant-pressure process during
combustion and the expansion of the hot products of combustion after fuel
injection ceases.
Diesel engines are often turbocharged and
aftercooled. Addition of a turbocharger
and after
cooler can enhance the performance of a
diesel engine in terms of both power and efficiency.
The most outstanding feature of the
diesel engine is its efficiency. By compressing air rather than using an
air-fuel mixture, the diesel engine is not limited by the preignition problems
that plague high-compression spark-ignition engines. Thus, higher compression
ratios can be achieved with diesel engines than with the spark-ignition
variety; commensurately, higher theoretical cycle efficiencies, when compared
with the latter, can often be realized. It should be noted that for a given
compression ratio the theoretical efficiency
of the spark-ignition engine is greater than that of the compression-ignition
engine; however, in practice it is possible to operate compression-ignition
engines at compression ratios high enough to produce efficiencies greater than
those attainable with spark-ignition systems. Furthermore, diesel engines do
not rely on throttling the intake mixture to control power. As such, the idling and reduced-power efficiency of the diesel is far superior
to that of the spark-ignition engine.
The principal drawback of diesel
engines is their emission of air pollutants. These engines typically discharge
high levels of particulate matter (soot), reactive nitrogen compounds (commonly
designated NOx), and odour compared with spark-ignition engines. Consequently,
in the small-engine category, consumer acceptance is low. A diesel engine is
started by driving it from some external power source until conditions have
been established under which the engine can run by its own power. The simplest
starting method is to admit air from a high-pressure source—about 1.7 to nearly
2.4 megapascals—to each of the cylinders in turn on their normal firing stroke.
The compressed air becomes heated sufficiently to ignite the fuel. Other
starting methods involve auxiliary equipment and include admitting blasts of
compressed air to an air-activated motor geared to rotate a large engine’s
flywheel; supplying electric current to an electric starting motor, similarly
geared to the engine flywheel; and applying a small gasoline engine geared to
the engine flywheel. The selection of the most suitable starting method depends
on the physical size of the engine to be started, the nature of the connected
load, and whether or not the load can be disconnected during starting.
Three basic size groups
There are three basic size groups of
diesel engines based on power—small, medium, and large. The small engines have
power-output values of less than 188 kilowatts, or 252 horsepower. This is the
most commonly produced diesel engine type. These engines are used in automobiles, light trucks, and some agricultural and construction
applications and as small stationary electrical-power generators (such as those
on pleasure craft) and as mechanical drives. They are typically
direct-injection, in-line, four- or six-cylinder engines. Many are turbocharged
with aftercoolers.
Medium engines have power capacities ranging from 188 to 750 kilowatts, or 252 to
1,006 horsepower. The majority of these engines are used in heavy-duty trucks.
They are usually direct-injection, in-line, six-cylinder turbocharged and aftercooled
engines. Some V-8 and V-12 engines also belong to this size group.
Large diesel engines have power
ratings in excess of 750 kilowatts. These unique engines are used for marine, locomotive, and mechanical drive applications and for electrical-power
generation. In most cases they are direct-injection, turbocharged and
aftercooled systems. They may operate at as low as 500 revolutions per minute
when reliability and durability are critical.
Two-stroke and four-stroke engines
As noted earlier, diesel engines are
designed to operate on either the two- or four-stroke cycle. In the typical
four-stroke-cycle engine, the intake and exhaust valves and the fuel-injection
nozzle are located in the cylinder head (see figure). Often, dual valve
arrangements—two intake and two exhaust valves—are employed. Use of the
two-stroke cycle can eliminate the need for one or both valves in the engine
design. Scavenging and intake air is
usually provided through ports in the cylinder liner. Exhaust can be either
through valves located in the cylinder head or through ports in the cylinder
liner. Engine construction is simplified when using a port design instead of
one requiring exhaust
valves.
Petroleum products normally used as fuel for
diesel engines are distillates
composed of heavy hydrocarbons,
with at least 12 to 16 carbon atoms per molecule. These heavier distillates are
taken from crude oil after the more volatile portions used in gasoline are removed. The boiling points of these heavier distillates
range from 177 to 343 °C (351 to 649 °F). Thus, their evaporation temperature
is much higher than that of gasoline, which has fewer carbon atoms per molecule. In the United States, specifications
for diesel
fuels are published by the American
Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM). ASTM D975 “Standard Specification for
Diesel Fuel Oils” covers specifications for five grades of diesel fuel oils:
Grade Low Sulfur No. 1-D—A special
purpose, light distillate fuel for automotive diesel engines requiring low
sulfur fuel and requiring higher volatility than that provided by Grade Low
Sulfur No. 2-D. Grade Low Sulfur No.
2-D—A general-purpose, middle distillate fuel
for automotive diesel engines requiring low sulfur fuel. It is also suitable
for use in non-automotive applications, especially in conditions of varying
speed and load.
Grade No. 1-D—A special purpose,
light distillate fuel for automotive diesel engines in applications requiring
higher volatility than that provided by
Grade No. 2-D fuels. Grade No. 2-D—A
general-purpose, middle distillate fuel for automotive diesel engines, which is
also suitable for use in non-automotive applications, especially in conditions
of frequently varying speed and load.
Grade No. 4-D—A heavy distillate
fuel, or a blend of distillate and residual oil, for low- and medium-speed
diesel engines in non-automotive applications involving predominantly constant
speed and load.
Water and sediment in fuels can be
harmful to engine operation; clean fuel is essential to efficient injection
systems. Fuels with a high carbon residue can be handled best by engines of
low-speed rotation. The same applies to those with high ash and sulfur content.
The cetane number, which defines the ignition quality of a fuel, is determined
using ASTM D613 “Standard Test Method for Cetane Number of Diesel Fuel Oil.”
Early work
Rudolf
Diesel, a German engineer, conceived the
idea for the engine that now bears his name after he had sought a device to
increase the efficiency of the Otto engine (the first four-stroke-cycle engine,
built by the 19th-century German engineer Nikolaus Otto). Diesel realized that the electric ignition process of the gasoline
engine could be eliminated if, during the compression stroke of a
piston-cylinder device, compression could heat air to a temperature higher than
the auto-ignition
temperature of a given fuel. Diesel proposed
such a cycle in his patents of 1892 and 1893.
Originally, either powdered coal or
liquid petroleum was proposed as fuel. Diesel saw powdered coal, a by-product of the Saar coal mines, as a readily available fuel.
Compressed air was to be used to introduce coal dust into the engine cylinder;
however, controlling the rate of coal injection was difficult, and, after the
experimental engine was destroyed by an explosion, Diesel turned to liquid
petroleum. He continued to introduce the fuel into the engine with compressed air.
The first commercial engine built on
Diesel’s patents was installed in St. Louis, Mo., by Adolphus Busch, a brewer who had seen one on display at an exposition in Munich and had purchased a license from Diesel for the
manufacture and sale of the engine in the United States and Canada. The engine
operated successfully for years and was the forerunner of the Busch-Sulzer
engine that powered many submarines
of the U.S. Navy in World War I. Another diesel engine used for the same
purpose was the Nelseco, built by the New London Ship and Engine Company in
Groton, Conn.
The diesel engine became the primary
power plant for submarines during World War I. It was not only economical in
the use of fuel but also proved reliable under wartime conditions. Diesel fuel,
less volatile than gasoline, was more safely stored and handled.
At the end of the war many men who
had operated diesels were looking for peacetime jobs. Manufacturers began to
adapt diesels for the peacetime economy. One modification was the development
of the so-called semidiesel that operated on a two-stroke cycle at a lower
compression pressure and made use of a hot bulb or tube to ignite the fuel
charge. These changes resulted in an engine less expensive to build and
maintain.
Fuel-injection technology
One objectionable feature of the
full diesel was the necessity of a high-pressure, injection air compressor. Not only was energy required to drive the air compressor,
but a refrigerating effect that delayed ignition
occurred when the compressed air,
typically at 6.9 megapascals (1,000 pounds per square inch), suddenly expanded
into the cylinder, which was at a pressure of about 3.4 to 4 megapascals (493
to 580 pounds per square inch). Diesel had needed high-pressure air with which
to introduce powdered coal into the cylinder; when liquid petroleum replaced
powdered coal as fuel, a pump could be
made to take the place of the high-pressure air compressor.
There were a number of ways in which
a pump could be used. In England the Vickers Company used what was called the
common-rail method, in which a battery of pumps
maintained the fuel under pressure in a pipe running the length of the engine
with leads to each cylinder. From this rail (or pipe) fuel-supply line, a
series of injection valves admitted the fuel charge to each cylinder at the
right point in its cycle. Another method employed cam-operated jerk, or
plunger-type, pumps to deliver fuel under momentarily high pressure to the
injection valve of each cylinder at the right time.
The elimination of the injection air compressor was a step in the right direction, but there was yet
another problem to be solved: the engine exhaust contained an excessive amount
of smoke, even at outputs well within the horsepower rating of the engine and
even though there was enough air in the cylinder to burn the fuel charge
without leaving a discoloured exhaust that normally indicated overload.
Engineers finally realized that the problem was that the momentarily
high-pressure injection
air exploding into the engine cylinder
had diffused the fuel charge more efficiently than the substitute mechanical
fuel nozzles were able to do, with the result that without the air compressor the fuel had to search out the oxygen atoms to complete the
combustion process, and, since oxygen makes up only 20 percent of the air, each
atom of fuel had only one chance in five of encountering an atom of oxygen. The
result was improper burning of the fuel.
The usual design of a fuel-injection nozzle
introduced the fuel into the cylinder in the form of a cone spray, with the
vapour radiating from the nozzle, rather than in a stream or jet. Very little
could be done to diffuse the fuel more thoroughly. Improved mixing had to be
accomplished by imparting additional motion to the air, most commonly by
induction-produced air swirls or a radial movement of the air, called squish,
or both, from the outer edge of the piston toward the centre. Various methods
have been employed to create this swirl and squish. Best results are apparently
obtained when the air swirl bears a definite relation to the fuel-injection
rate. Efficient utilization of the air within the cylinder demands a rotational
velocity that causes the entrapped air to move continuously from one spray to
the next during the injection period, without extreme subsidence between
cycles.
Price’s
engine
In 1914 a young American engineer,
William T. Price, began to experiment with an engine that would operate with a
lower compression
ratio than that of the diesel and at the
same time would not require either hot bulbs or tubes. As soon as his
experiments began to show promise, he applied for patents.
In Price’s engine the selected compression
pressure of nearly 1.4 megapascals (203 pounds per square inch) did not provide
a high enough temperature to ignite the fuel charge when starting. Ignition was
accomplished by a fine wire coil in the combustion chamber. Nichrome wire was
used for this because it could easily be heated to incandescence when an electric current was passed through it. The experimental engine had a single
horizontal cylinder with a bore of 43 cm (17 inches) and a stroke (maximum
piston movement) of 48 cm (19 inches) and operated at 257 revolutions per
minute. Because the nichrome wire required frequent replacement, the
compression pressure was raised to 2.4 megapascals (348 pounds per square
inch), which did provide a temperature high enough for ignition when starting.
Some of the fuel charge was injected before the end of the compression stroke
in an effort to increase the cycle timing and to keep the nichrome wire glowing
hot.
In the meantime many engines of the
two-stroke-cycle, semidiesel type were being installed. Some were used to
produce electricity for small municipalities, while others were installed in
water-pumping plants. Many provided power for tugs, fishing boats, trawlers,
and workboats.
In the early 1920s the General Electric Company suggested to the Ingersoll-Rand Company, for whom Price was
working, that they cooperate in the building of a diesel-electric locomotive. At that time many of the locomotives in service were
powered by gasoline engines. A diesel-electric locomotive with Price’s engine
was completed in 1924 and placed in service for switching purposes in New York City. The success of this locomotive resulted in orders from
railroads, factories, and open-pit mines. The engine used in most of these
installations was a six-cylinder, 25-cm (10-inch) bore, 30-cm (12-inch) stroke
system, rated 300 brake horsepower at 600 revolutions and weighing 6,800 kg
(15,000 pounds).
Subsequent
developments and applications
Many diesel engines were purchased
for marine propulsion. The diesels, however, normally rotated faster than was
desirable for the propellers of large ships because the high speeds of the huge
propellers tended to create hollowed-out areas within the water around the
propeller (cavitation), with resultant loss of thrust. The problem did not exist, however, with smaller
propellers, and diesel engines proved especially suitable for yachts, in which
speed is desired. The problem was solved by utilizing a diesel-electric
installation in which the engines were connected to direct-current generators
that furnished the electricity to drive an electric motor connected to the
ship’s propeller. There were also many installations in which the diesel was
connected either directly or through gears to the propeller. When diesel
engines with larger horsepower and slower rotation speeds became available,
they were installed in cargo and passenger ships.
The diesel engine became the
predominant power plant for military equipment on the ground and at sea during
World War II. Since then it has been adopted for use in heavy construction
machinery, high-powered farm tractors, and most large trucks and buses. Diesel
engines also have been installed in hospitals, telephone exchanges, airports,
and various other facilities to provide emergency power during electrical power
outages. In addition, they have been used in automobiles, albeit on a limited
scale. Although diesels provide better fuel economy than gasoline engines, they do not run as smoothly as the latter and emit higher
levels of pollutants.
A diesel engine is an
internal-combustion engine where air is compressed to a high temperature,
igniting diesel fuel injected into the cylinder, causing combustion and
expansion to actuate a piston. This process converts the chemical energy in the
fuel into mechanical energy, which powers freight trucks, large tractors,
locomotives, marine vessels, and some electric-power generators. A limited
number of automobiles also use diesel engines.
In a typical four-stroke diesel
engine, there is a sequence involving an intake valve, fuel-injection nozzle,
and exhaust valve. Fuel ignites upon reacting with compressed hot air in the
cylinder, making this process more efficient than that of a spark-ignition
engine. Diesel
engines operate on either a two-stroke or
four-stroke cycle and have compression ratios between 14:1 and 22:1. Engines
with bores less than 600 mm can be either two-stroke or four-stroke, while
those with larger bores are typically two-stroke systems.
Diesel engines gain energy by
burning fuel injected into the compressed hot air in the cylinder. The air
temperature must be higher than the fuel's auto-ignition temperature, which is
usually above 526 °C (979 °F). At engine start-up, supplemental heating of the
cylinders may be necessary. These engines are sometimes called
compression-ignition engines because combustion relies on air heated by
compression rather than an electric spark.
Fuel is introduced into the diesel
engine as the piston approaches the top dead center of its stroke, under high
pressure, either into a precombustion chamber or directly into the combustion
chamber. Most diesel engines use direct injection. Fuel-injection systems
typically provide pressures between 7 and 70 megapascals. Precise control of
fuel injection is crucial for diesel engine performance, as it regulates the
entire combustion process.
Combustion in a diesel engine is heterogeneous, meaning the fuel and air are not
premixed. Rapid vaporization and mixing of fuel in air are critical for
thorough combustion, emphasizing injector nozzle design. Engine work is
obtained during the power stroke, which includes both the constant-pressure
process during combustion and the expansion of combustion products after fuel
injection stops.
Diesel engines are often
turbocharged and aftercooled to enhance power and efficiency. They achieve
higher compression ratios than spark-ignition engines, leading to greater
theoretical cycle efficiencies. Diesel engines do not rely on throttling the
intake mixture to control power, making them more efficient at idling and
reduced power than spark-ignition engines.
However, diesel engines emit higher
levels of pollutants, including particulate matter, nitrogen compounds (NOx),
and odor, which limits their acceptance in the small-engine category.
Starting a diesel engine involves
using an external power source until it can run by itself. Methods include
high-pressure air admission to the cylinders, electric starting motors, or
small gasoline engines geared to the engine flywheel.
Diesel engines are categorized into
three size groups: small (less than 188 kW), medium (188-750 kW), and large
(over 750 kW). Small engines are used in automobiles, light trucks, and some
agricultural and construction applications. Medium engines power heavy-duty
trucks and are usually six-cylinder turbocharged systems. Large engines are
used for marine, locomotive, and mechanical drive applications, often operating
at low speeds for reliability.
Diesel engines use petroleum
distillates with high carbon atoms per molecule as fuel, with specifications
provided by the American Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM). Clean fuel is
essential for efficient injection systems, and the cetane number determines
fuel ignition quality.
Rudolf Diesel, a German engineer,
invented the diesel engine to increase the efficiency of the Otto engine. The
first commercial diesel engine was installed in St. Louis, Mo., by Adolphus
Busch. Diesel engines became the primary power plant for submarines during
World War I and were adapted for peacetime use after the war. Developments in
fuel-injection technology, such as cam-operated pumps and improved nozzle
designs, enhanced diesel engine efficiency
and reduced smoke emissions.
.


0 Reviews:
Post Your Review