3.6 Diesel Cycle
The Diesel cycle is a compression ignition (rather than spark
ignition) engine. Fuel is sprayed into the cylinder at
(high
pressure) when the compression is complete, and there is ignition
without a spark. An idealized Diesel engine cycle is shown in
Figure 3.12.
Figure 3.12:
The ideal Diesel cycle
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The thermal efficiency is given by:
This cycle can operate with a higher compression ratio than the Otto
cycle because only air is compressed and there is no risk of
auto-ignition of the fuel. Although for a given compression ratio
the Otto cycle has higher efficiency, because the Diesel engine can
be operated to higher compression ratio, the engine can actually
have higher efficiency than an Otto cycle when both are operated at
compression ratios that might be achieved in practice.
Muddy Points
When and where do we use
and
? Some definitions use
. Is it ever
?
(MP 3.8)
Explanation of the above comparison between Diesel and Otto.
(MP 3.9)
UnifiedTP
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