Diesel Cycle: Difference between revisions

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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==
=== 1 ===


<gallery>
<gallery>
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</math>
</math>


=== pV diagram ===


# Isentropic (adiabatic) expansion
# Isentropic (adiabatic) expansion
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* Cylinder pressure: ~30–80 bar
* Cylinder pressure: ~30–80 bar
* Injection pressure: ~1,000–2,500+ bar
* Injection pressure: ~1,000–2,500+ bar
=== Diesel Cycle and Ideal Gas ===
There are three (3) different processes:
# Isentropic <math>dU = nC_v dT = -pdV</math>
# Isobaric <math>Q = \Delta U + p \Delta V</math>
# Isochoric <math>\Delta Q = m c_v \Delta T</math>
where the specific heat capacity at constant volume is <math>c_v = \frac{dQ/dT}{m}</math>.
For a closed system, the total change in energy of a system is the sum of the work done and the heat added <math>dU = \delta W + \delta Q</math>, and the reversible work done on a system by changing the volume is <math>\delta W = - p dV</math>. Furthermore, for any transformation of an ideal gas, it is always true that <math>dU = nC_v dT</math>.
If the system is reversible and adiabatic ('''isentropic''') <math>\delta Q = 0</math>, which gives
<math>
dU = \delta W + \delta Q = -pdV + 0
</math>
<math>
dU = nC_v dT = -pdV
</math>
For the constant pressure ('''isobaric process''') <math>\Delta p = 0</math> we have <math>W = \int p dV = p \Delta V</math>, and by applying the ideal gas law, we get <math>W = n R \Delta T</math>.
For the '''Isochoric process''' <math>\Delta V=0</math>, and thus we have <math>dQ = dU = mc_v dT</math> which gives <math>\Delta Q = m c_v\Delta T</math>.
<math>
</math>
=== Real gas: Air ===
Basic ideal gas model (good first approximation). Air is usually approximated as an ideal gas with:
* Gas constant:
** R≈287 J/(kg\cdotpK)
** R≈287J/(kg\cdotpK)
* Equation of state:
* p=ρRT
This works well at:
* pressures near atmospheric
* temperatures roughly 200–500 K
“Generalized” ideal gas → temperature-dependent properties. To go beyond the simple model, you allow properties like heat capacity to vary with temperature:
Heat capacity. For air, a common approximation is a polynomial
<math>
c_p(T)=a+bT.
</math>
Typical coefficients (for dry air, ~200–1000 K range):
* a≈1005
* b≈0.1
More accurate forms come from NASA polynomials:
<math>
\frac{c_p}R=a_1+a_2T+a_3T^2+a_4T^3+a_5T^4
</math>
Which are widely used in CFD and thermodynamics.
Compressibility factor Z (real gas correction). If you want a generalized ideal gas, you often introduce <math>p=Z\rho RT</math>. Where
* Z=1 → ideal gas
* Z≠1 → real gas behavior
For air:
* At normal conditions:  Z≈1
* At high pressure: use virial expansion
<math>
Z=1+\frac{B(T)}V+\frac{C(T)}{V^2}+ \cdots
\approx 1+ \frac{B(T)}{RT}p.
</math>
Mixture-based formulation (more fundamental). Air is a mixture mainly of:
* N₂ (~78%)
* O₂ (~21%)
* Ar (~1%)
<math>
\begin{align}
R &=\sum_i y_i R_i \\
c_p & = \sum_i y_ i c_{p,i}(T)
\end{align}
</math>


== Realistic Diesel Cycle ==
== Realistic Diesel Cycle ==
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=== Diesel-air Mixture ===
=== Diesel-air Mixture ===


Only diesel is ejected into the cylinder.  
Only diesel is ejected into the cylinder. Clean air comes in during the intake stroke.


The heat capacity ratio (known as the adiabatic index) for a diesel-air mixture is typically around 1.4.  
The heat capacity ratio (known as the adiabatic index) for a diesel-air mixture is typically around 1.4.  
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=== MB data ===
=== MB data ===
Motor: OM648.


Mercedes Benz W211 (2003)
Mercedes Benz W211 (2003)

Latest revision as of 21:36, 30 March 2026

Introduction

1

Ratio of specific heats (heat capacity ratio) is defined as

pV diagram

  1. Isentropic (adiabatic) expansion
  2. Isochoric cooling (Qout): Heat rejection. Power stroke ends, heat rejection starts.
  3. Isobaric compression: Exhaust
  4. Isobaric expansion: Intake
  5. Isentropic (adiabatic) compression
  6. Isobaric heating (Qin): Combustion of fuel (heat is added in a constant pressure;)

Engine displacement is the cylinder volume swept by all of the pistons of a piston engine, excluding the combustion chambers. A combustion chamber is part of an internal combustion engine in which the fuel/air mix is burned.

Only air is compressed, and then diesel fuel is injected directly into that hot, high-pressure air.

  • Cylinder pressure: ~30–80 bar
  • Injection pressure: ~1,000–2,500+ bar

Diesel Cycle and Ideal Gas

There are three (3) different processes:

  1. Isentropic
  2. Isobaric
  3. Isochoric

where the specific heat capacity at constant volume is .


For a closed system, the total change in energy of a system is the sum of the work done and the heat added , and the reversible work done on a system by changing the volume is . Furthermore, for any transformation of an ideal gas, it is always true that .


If the system is reversible and adiabatic (isentropic) , which gives


For the constant pressure (isobaric process) we have , and by applying the ideal gas law, we get .

For the Isochoric process , and thus we have which gives .

Real gas: Air

Basic ideal gas model (good first approximation). Air is usually approximated as an ideal gas with:

  • Gas constant:
    • R≈287 J/(kg\cdotpK)
    • R≈287J/(kg\cdotpK)
  • Equation of state:
  • p=ρRT

This works well at:

  • pressures near atmospheric
  • temperatures roughly 200–500 K


“Generalized” ideal gas → temperature-dependent properties. To go beyond the simple model, you allow properties like heat capacity to vary with temperature:

Heat capacity. For air, a common approximation is a polynomial Typical coefficients (for dry air, ~200–1000 K range):

  • a≈1005
  • b≈0.1

More accurate forms come from NASA polynomials: Which are widely used in CFD and thermodynamics.

Compressibility factor Z (real gas correction). If you want a generalized ideal gas, you often introduce . Where

  • Z=1 → ideal gas
  • Z≠1 → real gas behavior

For air:

  • At normal conditions: Z≈1
  • At high pressure: use virial expansion


Mixture-based formulation (more fundamental). Air is a mixture mainly of:

  • N₂ (~78%)
  • O₂ (~21%)
  • Ar (~1%)

Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \begin{align} R &=\sum_i y_i R_i \\ c_p & = \sum_i y_ i c_{p,i}(T) \end{align} }

Realistic Diesel Cycle

Ratio of specific heats γ

Caption text
Condition γ (approx.)
Stoichiometric ~1.30–1.33
Moderate lean ~1.33–1.37
Very lean (diesel) ~1.37–1.40

Injection pressures

  • Older systems: 200–500 bar
  • Modern common-rail: 1,000–2,500 bar
  • Latest systems: up to ~3,000 bar
  • Air pressure in cylinder: ~30–80 bar, which is the pressure of the combustion chamber.
  • Temperature: ~700–1000 K

Diesel-air Mixture

Only diesel is ejected into the cylinder. Clean air comes in during the intake stroke.

The heat capacity ratio (known as the adiabatic index) for a diesel-air mixture is typically around 1.4.

Air-fuel ratio
14.5:1 Near-stoichiometric; good combustion efficiency but higher emissions.
16:1 Balanced performance; good power output and efficiency.
18:1 Lean burn; improved fuel economy but potential for higher NOx emissions.


Diesel is a complicated compound, but it’s commonly approximated as a hydrocarbon like C12H23 (or C12H26). Air is about 21% O2 and 79% N2. Without nitrogen, the stoichiometric ratio is about

C12​H23​+17.75O2​→12CO2​+11.5H2​O

and by including nitrogen, we get

C12​H23​+17.75( O2 + 3.76 N2 )​→12CO2​+11.5H2​O + 66.74 N2.

The molar masses

  • Fuel: 167 g/mol
  • Air: 137.28 g/mol

And the total air needed is 17.72 x 137.28 = 2436 g, which gives air-to-fuel-ratio to

MB data

Motor: OM648.

Mercedes Benz W211 (2003)

  • Engine displacement: 3222 cm3 = 0.003222 m3
  • Bore x Stroke: 88.0 x 88.4 mm3
  • Compression Ratio: 18.0

Bore x stroke gives V = 6xπ(8.8/2)2 x 8.84 cm3 = 3225.95cm3, which is rather close.

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