petrol engine project verka(b) amritsar

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  • 8/14/2019 Petrol Engine Project Verka(b) Amritsar

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    By : Students of Class 9 th B

    SARABJIT SINGH ***KARANVEER ***HARJINDERJIT SINGH

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    The most commonly used source of power for motor vehicles, introduced by the German

    engineers Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz in 1885. The petrol engine is a complex piece of

    machinery made up of about 150 moving parts. It is a reciprocating piston engine, in which anumber of pistons move up and down in cylinders. A mixture of petrol and air is introduced to

    the space above the pistons and ignited. The gases produced force the pistons down,

    generating power. The engine-operating cycle is repeated every four strokes (upward or

    downward movement) of the piston, this being known as the four-stroke cycle . The motion of

    the pistons rotate a crankshaft, at the end of which is a heavy flywheel. From the flywheel the

    power is transferred to the car's driving wheels via the transmission system of clutch,

    gearbox, and final drive.

    The parts of the petrol engine can be subdivided into a number of systems. The fuel system

    pumps fuel from the petrol tank into the carburettor. There it mixes with air and is sucked into

    the engine cylinders. (With electronic fuel injection, it goes directly from the tank into the

    cylinders by way of an electronic monitor.) The ignition system supplies the sparks to ignite

    the fuel mixture in the cylinders. By means of an ignition coil and contact breaker, it boosts

    the 12-volt battery voltage to pulses of 18,000 volts or more. These go via a distributor to the

    spark plugs in the cylinders, where they create the sparks. (Electronic ignitions replace theseparts.) Ignition of the fuel in the cylinders produces temperatures of 700C/1,300F or more,

    and the engine must be cooled to prevent overheating.

    Most engines have a water-cooling system, in which water circulates through channels in the

    cylinder block, thus extracting the heat. It flows through pipes in a radiator, which are cooled

    by fan-blown air. A few cars and most motorcycles are air-cooled, the cylinders being

    surrounded by many fins to present a large surface area to the air. The lubrication system also

    reduces some heat, but its main job is to keep the moving parts coated with oil, which ispumped under pressure to the camshaft, crankshaft, and valve-operating gear.

    INTRODUCTION

    http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0016503.htmlhttp://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0016503.html
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    The internal combustion engine does away with the need for an external heat source. Fuel is

    burned within the engine to provide the heat that does the useful work. Generally theseengines use fossil fuels which are particularly concentrated forms of energy. We will look at

    the two most common types: The petrol engine which uses the Otto Cycle; The diesel engine.

    The Otto Cycle

    The four-stroke Otto cycle is shown in the diagram:

    Internal Combustion Engines

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    The indicator diagram for the Otto cycle is like this:

    Let's look at the cycle and link it to the indicator diagram:

    1. The induction stroke takes place at A. Although in theory the pressure should be the

    same as atmospheric, in practice it's rather lower. The amount of petrol air mixture

    taken in can be increased by use of a supercharger.

    2. A to B is the compression stroke. Both valves are closed. The compression is

    adiabatic, and no heat enters or leaves the cylinder.

    3. Ignition occurs at C. The gases resulting from the ignition expand adiabatically, leading

    to the power stroke.

    4. D to A the gas is cooled instantaneously.

    5. At A the exhaust stroke occurs and the the gases are removed at constant pressure to

    the atmosphere.

    6. Strange as it may seem, the piston does half a revolution at A. Actually it's slightly inpractice, as the the valve timing is more complex.

    In practice the thermodynamics of a petrol engine are more complex: Fuel burns during the cycle, so the number of moles is not constant. The cycle takes place very quickly, so there is swirling of the gases. The kinetic energy

    of gases is not taken into account in these indicator diagrams.

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    There are considerable temperature gradients, so we cannot deal with the gas as if it

    were constant temperature. Ignition takes a finite time, and takes time to propagate through the fuel-air mix.

    Therefore pressures will vary within the gas.

    The efficiency of a petrol engine can be increased by increasing the compression ratio.

    However the heating of the gases can ignite the petrol prematurely. This pre-ignition is known

    as knocking or pinking. It can do a lot of damage to the engine.

    PETROL CYCLEThe petrol cycle differs from the Otto cycle in that the induction stroke takes in only air. The

    are is compressed quite a lot so that it gets hot. The fuel is injected into the hot air, and

    ignites. This produces the power stroke.

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    The indicator diagram is quite different to that of a petrol engine:

    Let's now look what happens in the indicator diagram:

    1. The induction stroke takes air in ideally at constant volume, pressure at temperature.

    2. The compression stroke takes place from A to B. The air is compressed adiabatically to

    about 1/20 of its original volume. It gets hot.

    3. From B to C fuel is injected in atomised form. It burns steadily so that the pressure on

    the piston is constant.

    4. From C to D the power stroke moves the piston down as adiabatic expansion takes

    place.

    5. D to A cooling and exhaust occurs.

    The diesel engine has a higher thermal efficiency than the petrol engine. However it does

    have the disadvantage in that it is heavier. Also the size of engine for a given power tends tobe bigger. They also tend to be noisier and incomplete combustion makes for considerable

    pollution.

    However diesels have been made lighter and more refined for luxury cars. Experiments with

    diesels for aircraft have been hugely successful. Jet A1 fuel (paraffin) costs 30 p a litre

    compared with Avgas (unleaded aviation petrol) at 90 p a litre.

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    This aircraft uses two 1.7 litre diesels (of the same type as found in Mercedes cars, but with

    higher quality components). It can fly at 360 km/h, and flying at 150 km/h burns about 3 litresof fuel per hour. Rather more economical than a family saloon, but at 300 000 euros not

    exactly a snip. The picture below shows the engine used, the Centurion 1.7

    For either kind of engine, we can predict the power that the engine can give out by using a

    simple formula:

    Power output = area of p-V loop x no of cylinders x number of cycles per second

    A common bear trap is that a single cylinder four stroke engine goes through each cycle once

    every two revolutions.

    We can also work out the maximum energy that can be put into an engine by this formula:

    Input Power = calorific value of fuel x flow rate of the fuel

    The fuel for any engine has a calorific value which is the energy that can be got out of the fuel

    per unit mass. It is measured in joules per kilogram. For wood the calorific value is about 20

    x 10 6 J kg -1, while for oil it is 42 x 10 6 J kg -1.

    In engineering articles, watch out for fuel flows in kg min -1 which need to be converted to

    kg/s.

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    Test-bed measurements made on a single-cylinder 4-stroke petrol engine produced the

    following data: mean temperature of gases in cylinder during combustion stroke 820 C mean temperature of exhaust gases 77 C

    area enclosed by indicator diagram loop 380J rotational speed of output shaft 1800 rev min -1 power developed by engine at output shaft 4.7kW calorific value of fuel 45 MJ kg -1 flow rate of fuel 2.1 10 -2 kg min -1

    (a) The rate at which energy is supplied to the engine

    (b) The indicated power of the engine;

    (c) The thermal efficiency of the engine. (AQA Question, adapted) ANSWER

    Automobiles are powered and controlled by a complicated interrelationship between several

    systems. This diagram shows the parts of a car with a gas engine and manual transmission(the air filter and carburetor have been removed to show the parts beneath but usually appear

    in the space above the intake manifold). The major systems of the automobile are the power

    plant, the power train, the running gear, and the control system. Each of these major

    categories include a number of subsystems, as shown here. The power plant includes the

    engine, fuel, electrical, exhaust, lubrication, and coolant systems. The power train includes

    the transmission and drive systems, including the clutch, differential, and drive shaft.

    Suspension, stabilizers, wheels, and tires are all part of the running gear, or support system.Steering and brake systems are the major components of the control system, by which the

    driver directs the car.

    Automobile Systems

    http://www.antonine-education.co.uk/physics_a2/options/Module_7/Topic_4/answer_7_4_6.htmhttp://www.antonine-education.co.uk/physics_a2/options/Module_7/Topic_4/answer_7_4_6.htm
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    Fuel-Injection System

    The fuel-injection system replaces the carburetor in most new vehicles to provide a

    more efficient fuel delivery system. Electronic sensors respond to varying engine

    speeds and driving conditions by changing the ratio of fuel to air. The sensors send a

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    fine mist of fuel from the fuel supply through a fuel-injection nozzle into a combustion

    chamber, where it is mixed with air. The mixture of fuel and air triggers ignition.

    Early Internal-Combustion Engine

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    One of the most important inventions of the mid- to late 1800s, the internal-combustion

    engine generated mechanical energy by burning fuel in a combustion chamber. The

    introduction of the new engine led almost immediately to the development of the

    automobile, which had been largely unfeasible with the unwieldy steam engine. Shown

    here is a 1925 Morris engine, the basic unit for a family car. It features four in-line

    cylinders with aluminum pistons. The valves are opened by push rods operated by a

    camshaft and closed by springs. Power is transmitted by means of the crankshaft to

    the gearbox.

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    SPARE PARTS

    SPECIAL THANKS TO

    COMPUTER DEPARTMENT

    GOVT. SEC. SCHOOL VERKA (B)