Making More Efficient Combustion Engines

Improving internal combustion engine efficiency is a prime concern today. Engineers have devised many methods like turbocharging, cam-less engines, direct fuel injection, VIT, regenerative braking, etc. In this article we discuss the factors limiting the efficiency of ICE and ways to increase it.

 

Increasing Efficiency

There is a lot of concern nowadays about the efficiency of the internal combustion engine (ICE), and a lot of research is being done to improve it. But what exactly is the efficiency of the internal combustion engine and how do we measure it? The efficiency of any engine is simply calculated from the energy of the fuel supplied per unit time to do work and the output at the shaft of the engine after subtracting all losses. The input power of the fuel can be obtained from the mass of the fuel and its calorific value. The shaft output can be measured from a brake dynamometer. Simply put efficiency is Output/Input. The average ICE has an efficiency between 20 to 30%, which is very low.

If we see a heat balance sheet of the internal combustion engines for a spark ignition or gasoline engine we find that the brake load efficiency is between 21 to 28%, whereas loss to cooling water is between 12 to 27%, loss to exhaust is between 30 to 55 %, and loss due to incomplete combustion is between 0 to 45%.

Similarly when we analyze the heat balance sheet of a compression ignition or diesel engine we find that it has a brake load efficiency between 29 to 42 % and loss to cooling water is between 15 to 35 %, losses to exhaust is between 25 to 45 %, and losses due to incomplete combustion is 0 to 5 %.

By analyzing the two heat balance sheets we find that in Gasoline engines loss due to incomplete combustion can be rather high. In this article we discuss the various technologies and methods that may be employed to increase the efficiency of Internal Combustion Engines as well as automobiles.

 

Heat Balance Sheet

 

Factors Limiting the Efficiency of Internal Combustion Engine

By analyzing the heat balance sheet we find that the factors limiting the efficiency of an internal combustion engine are as follows:

·         Heat losses during cooling of engine.

·         Heat losses in exhaust gases.

·         Friction loss

·         Transmission efficiency losses. Losses in clutches and fluid couplings, etc.

·         Friction losses in tires. Tire selection is a compromise between safety, stability, and performance. A safer tire will give a minimum braking distance, good stability, less skidding, but less fuel efficiency. A tire having less surface contact and more of a line contact will be fuel efficient, but unsafe.

 

 

Carnot's Theorem for Efficiency

The second law of thermodynamics states it is impossible to construct an engine which will work in a complete cycle and produce no other effect except the raising of a weight and the cooling of a heat reservoir. Thus it there is a limit to the thermal efficiency of heat engines.

Sadi Carnot, a French military engineer had studied the second law and stated that, “ No heat engine working in a cycle between two constant temperature reservoirs can be more efficient than a reversible engine working between the same two reservoirs." Thus the maximum efficiency any heat engine can have is by using the Carnot’s cycle (two reversible isotherms and two reversible adiabatic). The Carnot limit is the maximum efficiency any engine can have. To date the highest efficiency which has been obtained is 52% in a Maritime diesel engine of 90,000 horsepower.

 

Methods and Technology for Improving Internal Combustion Engine Efficiency

The practical methods and new technology that help in increasing the efficiency of the internal combustion engines are as follows: