Compression-ratio is a very important parameter
for measuring engine performance.The compression-ratio may be defined as
the ratio of the maximum cylinder volume when the piston is at its
outermost position (BDC) to the minimum cylinder volume (the clearance
volume) with the piston at its innermost position (TDC) - that is, the
sum of the swept and clearance volumes divided by the clearance volume,
Vs þVc i:e: CR ¼ Vc
where CR ¼ compression ratio
Vs ¼ swept volume (cm3) Vc ¼ clearance volume (cm3)
Petrol engines have compression-ratios of the
order of 7:1 to 10:1; but, to produce self-ignition of the charge,
diesel engines usually double these figures and may have values of
between 14:1 and 24:1 for naturally aspirated (depression-induced
filling) types, depending on the design.
In an engine cylinder, the gas molecules are
moving about at considerable speed in the space occupied by the gas,
colliding with other molecules and the boundary surfaces of the cylinder
head, the cylinder walls, and the piston crown. The rapid succession of
impacts of many millions of molecules on the boundary walls produces a
steady continuous force per unit surface which is known as pressure
(Fig. 1.1-12).
When the gas is compressed into a much smaller
space, the molecules are brought closer to one another. This raises the
temperature and greatly increases the speed of the molecules and hence
their kinetic energy, so more violent impulses will impinge on the
piston crown. This increased activity of the molecules is experienced as
increased opposition to movement of the piston towards the cylinder
head.
The process of compressing a constant mass of gas
into a much smaller space enables many more molecules to impinge per
unit area on to the piston. When burning of the gas occurs, the chemical
energy of combustion is rapidly transformed into heat energy which
considerably increases the kinetic energy of the closely packed gas
molecules. Therefore the extremely large number of molecules squeezed
together will thus bombard the piston crown at much higher speeds. This
then means that a very large number of repeated blows of considerable
magnitude will strike the piston and so push it towards ODC.
This description of compression, burning, and
expansion of the gas charge shows the importance of utilising a high
degree of compression before burning takes place, to improve the
efficiency of combustion. The amount of compression employed in the
cylinder is measured by the reduction in volume when the piston moves
from BDC to TDC, the actual proportional change in volume being
expressed as the compression-ratio.
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