Methods and designs for increasing efficiency in engines
09574502 ยท 2017-02-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02B2053/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B53/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D15/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
An efficient thermal engine is disclosed. In some embodiments, a remainder of energy remaining after an expansion cycle is used to power a subsequent compression cycle. In other embodiments, novel configurations for a larger expansion volume than compression volume are provided. In addition, work of compression may be reduced in a compression cycle, and recovered in an expansion cycle.
Claims
1. A thermal engine having high efficiency comprising: at least one or more mechanically variable volumes within which compression and expansion of a working fluid occurs, at least one controlled intake valve for ingesting a working fluid into said one or more variable volumes just prior to compression of said working fluid, at least one controlled exhaust valve for exhausting said working fluid from said one or more variable volumes after heating and expansion of said working fluid, at least one rotational power shaft for extraction of power from said engine, trochoidal gears connected between said at least one or more mechanically variable volumes and said rotational power shaft, said trochoidal gears providing a maximum intake volume within said one or more variable volumes upon closure of said controlled intake valve that is smaller than a maximum expanded volume within said one or more variable volumes upon opening of said controlled exhaust valve, whereby said working fluid expands within said greater maximum expanded volume, thereby providing more efficiency than expansion of said working fluid in said maximum intake volume.
2. The engine of claim 1 wherein said set of Trochoidal gears are selected from the group consisting of Epitrochoid gears, Hypotrochoid gears, Epicycloid gears, Hypocycloid gears, Cycloid gears, Limacon gears, Rosetta/Rose gears, Trisectrix gears, Cayley gears, Tricuspoid gears, and Trifolium gears.
3. The engine of claim 2 wherein a maximum intake volume to be compressed within said one or more mechanically variable volumes is from about rd to .sup.rd of a maximum expanded volume within said one or more mechanically variable volumes.
4. The engine of claim 2 wherein a fully compressed volume of said working fluid within said one or more mechanically variable volumes is about th to about 1/11.sup.th of said maximum intake volume to be compressed.
5. The engine of claim 2 wherein a fully compressed volume of said working fluid within said one or more mechanically variable volumes is about 1/16th to about 1/20.sup.th of the maximum intake volume to be compressed.
6. The engine of claim 2 wherein a rotational phase angle between said Trochiodal gears is selected to provide a fully compressed volume of said working fluid within said one or more mechanically variable volumes that is greater than a fully exhausted volume of an expanded said working fluid within said one or more mechanically variable volumes, for exhausting as much of said expanded working fluid as possible.
7. The engine of claim 2 wherein said maximum expanded volume within said one or more mechanically variable volumes is twice as large as a corresponding said maximum intake volume to be compressed within said one or more mechanically variable volumes.
8. The engine of claim 4 wherein said working fluid includes a fuel, and an ignitor within said fully compressed volume for initiating burning of said fuel.
9. The engine of claim 5 wherein said working fluid includes a fuel characterized by auto-ignition upon injection into a compressed said working fluid.
10. The engine of claim 1 further comprising a first said mechanically variable volume configured for ingesting, compressing igniting and expanding said working fluid, and discharging an expanded said working fluid into a second mechanically variable volume for further expansion of said working fluid, said second mechanically variable volume discharging a fully expanded said working fluid.
11. The engine of claim 10 further comprising a pair of said first mechanically variable volumes configured for ingesting, compressing igniting and expanding said working fluid in an out-of phase alternating relation, and a single said second mechanically variable volume for further expansion of said working fluid, said pair of said first mechanically variable volumes configured for alternately discharging a partially expanded said working fluid into said single second mechanically variable volume for further expansion of said working fluid, said second mechanically variable volume allowing further expansion of a received and expanded said working fluid from one or the other of said pair of first mechanically variable volumes and discharging said working fluid during each 360 degree rotation of said at least one rotational power shaft.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(51) Approach to Designing a Carnot Engine
(52) The approach to creating a Carnot Engine is begun by first realizing that true perfect Carnot efficiency is not the goal, but emulation of the Carnot Cycle to a maximum pragmatic extent possible is really our goal. We therefore seek ways to emulate the Carnot Cycle as closely as possible using what ever means possible to instantiate the approximation to the Carnot Cycle. Note that since today's Otto engines are challenged to achieve 30% efficiency, and today's Diesel engines are likewise challenged to achieve 40%, and since any of the typical efficiency modifications employed in modern engines usually do not provide more than single digit efficiency improvements (if that large), it would not take that large efficiency improvement to obtain a marked improvement over the current art in efficient engine design. But the objective of the current invention is to provide a factor of 2 (100%) or more efficiency improvement, and this by itself distinguishes the current invention from others practicing in the art. The approach to achieving this dramatic improvement is to ascertain the aspects of the Carnot Cycle that differentiate it versus other cycles, then isolate and instantiate improvements in those various differentials, and then to synergistically combine those improvements into a whole which attempts to emulate the Carnot cycle to the maximum extent possible within the numerous engineering, systems requirements and user constraints levied on the engine design process. Therefore, although there are numerous particular subordinate inventions disclosed herein, the true invention that provides our goal of dramatic efficiency improvements is really the synergistic integrated whole of significant individual improvement parts which result in benefit larger than the sum of those parts.
(53) Approach to Designing a Carnot-Diesel Cycle Engine
(54) In pursuing this high efficiency goal, it is convenient to start from a reasonably well understood starting point, such as the Diesel engine.
(55) A complimentary but substantially similar approach is to start with the Carnot Cycle, which is the defining maximum efficiency cycle between any pair of differing temperatures and differing entropies, and inquire not into its efficiency, since that is known to be maximized, but into modifications which would enhance its ability to produce more work per cycle. This is because the Carnot Cycle, although being of optimum efficiency, is not given to produce copious amounts of output power per cycle because its compression phase and expansion phase are so close to each other. Therefore, a pragmatic Carnot-like engine must of necessity sacrifice some efficiency in order to produce the desired power densities to be of interest for actual application.
(56) From these two prior figures, a core theme for the current invention emerges. To achieve Carnot-like efficiency with higher levels of output power than might be enjoyed from a pure Carnot engine, one needs to increase the expansion volume vis- vis the original Carnot Cycle. Furthermore, there is no overt requirement that the compressed volume be the same as the expanded volume (other than absolute maximum Carnot efficiency, which as stated above we are willing to sacrifice some of to get higher power). This then introduces a core concept to the current invention, that the expansion ratio can, and indeed must, be larger than the compression ratio to achieve a practice Carnot-like efficient engine with desirable performance attributes demanded by users.
(57) To achieve maximum efficiency, we must convert the standard Diesel engine into a variant we will call the Carnot-Diesel Engine (Carnot for short). Our approach to this new engine design includes the following: Determine which other conventional engines most closely resembles the desired Carnot Cycle Second, analyze the differences between the baseline conventional engines and the Carnot Cycle Third, determine how to convert the conventional Diesel engine into a Carnot-Diesel cycle engine
These key thrusts for efficiency improvement are illustrated in
(58) Next we assess the differences between the baseline Diesel engine and the Carnot cycle engine. The differences are as follows.
(59) With respect to Diesel engines, 1. They do not have an Isothermal path on the early part of the compression stroke. 2. Heat is not withdrawn gradually in the early part of the compression stroke. 3. Heat is added fairly quickly from the heat source in an Isobaric (Iso-pressure) process. 4. Heat is not added gradually in the early part of the expansion stroke. 5. It does not have an Isothermal path on the early part of the expansion stroke. 6. Heat is released to the cold sink all at once in an Isochoric process at the end of the cycle.
Finally, we determine how to convert the differences to eliminate them. Differences 1 & 2 go together, and mean that we need to cool the compressing gas early during compression. This eases the compressibility of the gas and thereby reduces compression work required. Differences 3, 4 & 5 also go together and are the antithesis of Differences 1 & 2. They mean we need to slow down the rate of fuel flow, more specifically the rate of fuel burning, making it a time or a crank angle dependent function of the engine. Difference 6 is possibly the most significant as it lets a significant amount of power escape unused. It is this loss that is most reduced by higher compression ratios in the standard Diesel engine, and by the significantly larger expansion ratio to be proposed for the new engine. From the above, we see that there are basically three key changes needed: A cooling heat exchanging means needs to be introduced in the design which only cools the working gas on the compression stroke, and preferably only during the first part of the compression stroke. The fuel injectors need to be modified (probably also the combustion chamber) so that heat is introduced at a slower controlled rate to produce an isothermal process for the first part of the expansion stroke. Note that while this may reduce peak power and torque, as the pressure might be less, that is controllable by changing the fuel injection rate to be higher when needed at a sacrifice in efficiency for a short period. Finally, the large hot gas residue left in the cylinder at the end of the exhaust stroke needs to be converted to work instead of being released into the environment as waste heat. The left over pressure in a combustion cylinder or chamber is considerable (hundreds of PSI) at all but the lowest power levels. This is the reason that one requires a muffler on virtually all internal combustion engines. Given a closed cycle, the only practical way to harness this left over power is to make the expansion stroke volume larger than the intake stroke. This is paramount to creating an extreme Atkinson cycle engine, as shown previously in
Early Compression Stroke Cooling
(60) As discussed in the previous section, we first address Differences 1 & 2 in the prior numbered list, i.e. to introduce a cooling of the working fluid early in the compression stroke. This is an important attribute of a maximally efficient cycle, because it is this cooling that potentially reduces the pressure differential between the end of the power stroke and the beginning of the compression stroke, and brings the phases together at points 4 and 1 of
(61) The question of course is how to instantiate such cooling. It needs to happen AFTER the working fluid has fully entered the cylinder and the cylinder is sealed. Cooling before the intake valve may help improve power density by its effective supercharging effect, but it is not the same as the required in-compression phase cooling. This cooling also has to happen very quickly during the early part of the compression phase, which in a fast turning engine is measured in milliseconds
(62) One solution may be to introduce an in-chamber heat exchanger 68 or cooling radiation as illustrated in
(63) However, a more interesting and potentially more effective approach is to use evaporative cooling. We propose to use a similar scheme by spraying cool atomized fuel into the air charge after the intake valves have closed but before significant compression takes place. This cools the air, reducing its pressure and reducing the compression work needed for the compression stroke, particularly in its early phase of compression where needed most. Note this is quite different from injecting fuel into the air before ingestion into the cylinder. In the former, the evaporative cooling of the fuel cools the air charge to make compression easier. In the latter the fuel cools and increases air density before indigestion into the cylinder: this increases the air-fuel charge weight, which increases engine power, but it will not reduce the compression work required to compress the fuel-air charge (in fact it will increase it).
(64) It is expected that only a partial charge of fuel is needed to get meaningful cooling, and such a low fuel-air ratio charge is anticipated to not be rapidly combustible. This is because even with Diesel compression ratios a partial charge injection of fuel into the chamber will, after suitable atomization and absorption of heat from the air/oxidizer in the chamber, be very lean in mixture, thereby not readily supporting a predestination combustion. However, if necessary, the compression ratio can be lowered to eliminate any risk of pre-combustion, and, by using the mechanical designs to be shown subsequently, this reduction in compression ratio will not result in a significant reduction in efficiency.
(65) It is also interesting to entertain the concept of using this early compression stroke fuel injection as THE method for fuel introduction in a modified Otto Cycle engine. All that would be required is the addition of Diesel-like fuel injectors and the elimination of the carburetor or manifold fuel injection system.
(66) Time/Phase Profile Metered Fuel Injection
(67) As mentioned previously, we now address Differences 3, 4 & 5 in the aforementioned numbered list of differences between the Carnot Cycle and the Diesel cycle, specifically, that which requires instantiation of the isothermal expansion profile shown in phase 3-4 of the Carnot Cycle illustrated in
(68) In the past, significant modification of this quick burn time has been limited by the technical constraints of high-pressure fuel injection, and perhaps an absence of motivation to change it other than for pollution reduction reasons. But recent advances in Common-Rail Fuel Injection (CRFI) introduce the potential for significant modifications to the burn profile. CRFI has come so far as to be featured in the July 2006 issue of Popular Science (page 44) describing how the Audi R10 TDI racecar became the first Diesel-powered car to win a major auto-racing event, Florida's 12-hour Sebring endurance race. They claim a key technology was their piezo-electric (PZT) CRFI system that closely followed prescribed controls for maximum power, efficiency and low emissions, while simultaneously helping to eliminate slow starts. A quick survey reveals some of the newer PZT CRFI systems can produce over 5 fuel pulses during one injection cycle. It therefore appears feasible to use a variant of this technology to meter out a precise heat input profile as called for in
(69) Deriving CarnotDiesel Cycle Engine Mechanics
(70) We finally address the aforementioned Difference 6 in the numbered list of differences between the Carnot and Diesel cycles, which is arguably the largest loss mechanism found in conventional engines. This mechanism is the loss of potentially useable residual power that is allowed to escape out the exhaust port during process 41 in
(71) References [1] and [2] focus more on the compression aspect of the efficiency problem rather than the expansion part of the problem. This is no doubt because Tinker's revelation was about the dynamic (versus static) role of the compression work in the efficiency of an engine as illustrated in
(72) A key interesting aspect of Tinker's efficiency equation is the triple dependence on the input heat Qin the output (waste) heat Qout, and the compression work, Win; the admission of two solutions, and the admission of possible complex efficiency via the square root of possible negative numbers. These are all discussed to some extent in reference [1], further characterization is possible such as shown in
(73) In fact reference [2] has proposed a related method for improving the efficiency of reciprocating heat engines they call the Engine Cycle Interdependence Frustration Method (ECIFM). The theory on which the method is based claims unprecedented success in modeling internal combustion engine (ICE) efficiencies as reported in the scientific literature. It claims to nearly exactly reproduce the as-yet-unresolved, 1959 discovery of a 17:1 compression ratio efficiency peak. Specifically, this method claims to identify a flaw in all existing ICE implementations that prohibits them from achieving the efficiencies predicted by the universally accepted fuel-air cycle model. This purported flaw is claimed remedied by the ECIFM using current ICE designs on new and, with aftermarket products, even existing engines. This is claimed to equate to an approximately thirty percent increase in heat engine efficiency.
(74) These revelations are intriguing and worthy of further investigation. But Applicant's examination of the ECIFM concept revealed possible conceptual as well as possible mechanical implementation issues with the ECIFM approach proposed in [2]. However, this examination also led to the belief that Tinker has done the Physics correctly. Consequently, we look for other methods for achieving Tinker's goal, via not lose the energy out the 4-1 phase (i.e. out the exhaust port). Towards this end, Applicant recognizes that just as with the Atkinson cycle, if the power stroke can be made larger with respect to the intake stroke, as shown in
(75) Various means have been proposed to instantiate differences between the compression stroke and the power stroke, the method of Atkinson just one of many. But these all fail to produce but a small token increase in efficiency, typically measured as single digit percentage increases (or less). The reason for this is both a matter of conception and a matter of degree. The matter of conception is that with few if any exceptions, all methods to decrease compression work and/or increase expansion work center their conceptual reference around the concept of compression ratio. This is no doubt because they have been taught in school that the efficiency equations for the Otto and Diesel engines described earlier are functions of the compression ratio. That is, the prevailing conception in the art is that it is the compression ratio that needs to be increase in order to increase the efficiency of engines. This is at best a limited view of the efficiency, and at worst, it is most generally a false view because those efficiency equations containing the compression ratios are derived equations, not fundamentally defining equations. Tinker's equation of
(76) The matter of degree mentioned above comes about partially because of the matter of conception. That is, given that we have a compression ratio, then in an Otto cycle engine the prevailing art holds that the compression ratio cannot be made greater than about a factor of 10, or else the engine will suffer the deleterious effects of preignition and knocking. So one is held to the believe that one cannot raise the compression ratio above 10, and since the compression ratio is the defining term in the efficiency equation for Otto engines, that limits the efficiency to low values. Compression ratio increases are thereby limited to small increases of one out of 10 or so, and then only with copious very careful engineering to ensure avoidance of engine damage as well as possible emissions control problems. The same holds true with other methods such as the Miller cycle where only a few percent of the intake stroke gas volume is allowed to regurgitate through the intake valves. The efficiency improvement is measurable, but hardly likely to solve the energy crisis.
(77) It is a purpose of the current invention to teach that dramatic increases in efficiency require dramatic changes in the operating parameters and schema of current engines (or new engines). It is a further purpose of the current invention to teach that viable efficiency improvement means have been rejected or not applied to obtaining significant efficacy improvements (defined as large double digit percentage improvement values) due to practitioner discriminate against doing so because of their extremism, and this has placed those efficiency improvement means completely outside of the practice of the art due to the perceived unheard of large values involved: that is, the new recognition that many prior improvements in efficiency were small, simply because the practitioners did not realize or did not believe that larger gains could be had simply by extrapolating their techniques to the extreme.
(78) By way of example, consider a Diesel-like engine with a very high compression ratio of about 20:1. Better yet, consider a gasoline Otto engine with the same high ratio. Such an engine, if it could be built, would present a huge increase in efficiency over standard Otto engines, well over 60%. But most schooled in the art would claim such an engine could not be built. And they would be right IF we insist that the compression ratio must be the same as the expansion ration. But why? Why must the compression ratio be the same as the expansion ratio? There is no physical reason that these two parameters must be coupled, as they do not show any codependence in the thermodynamic relations except those that we might impose as a constraint. So consider an engine that has an acceptable compression ratio of 10:1 and a highly desirable expansion ratio of 20:1. That is, we desire the air (or a fuel-air mix) to be compressed by a factor of 10, but we want the expansion to exceed that to a factor of 2. These numbers are used just to keep the math simple: more realistic values might be preferred in an actually specific application.
(79) Such an engine would have a dramatically reduced compression work vis--vis its expansion work cycle. This has a direct and significant impact on the efficiency as measured with Tinker's equation. A simplified stick drawing of the volume profile of such an engine is illustrated in
(80) To mechanically realize this volume profile, shown in
(81) Consider that cylinders in pistons produce cyclic stroke motions, and the meaning of the two frequencies in
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(85) A particularly interesting embodiment is shown in
(86) Although
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(88) A related but somewhat different instantiation is shown in
(89) One thing that is not so obvious in any such arrangement is that the distance from the exhaust port from the outer cylinders to the intake port of the middle cylinders should be made as short as possible to ensure minimal enthalpy loss which would translate to thermal efficiency loss. This applies equally to the use of turbines as shown later in this disclosure. The solution is to simply arrange the cylinders so that there is a shortest possible distance between the cylinders along the connecting ports with also a smallest volume of that channel that does not restrict flow detrimentally. Other than close proximity, placing the valves on the sides of the cylinder walls nearest the other cylinders is one arrangement. Placing the cylinders with heads opposing is another possible arrangement to minimize this distance.
(90) Another arrangement not shown is where the head of one cylinder is arranged to the tail of another cylinder, said cylinders arranged end to end in a circling of the wagon train arrangement. These cylinders would employ double acting pistons and be phased one to the other so that the exhausting from one's head then powers the tail (opposed side of its piston) of the cylinder in front of it, thereby providing the same high expansion ratio as desired herein.
(91) One particular class of instantiations though is particularly worthy to call out since it is easy to realize with simple rotary mechanisms such as cams, wheels, gears and crank shafts, all of which are well demonstrated in the art of engine and mechanical design. Referring back to
(92) Of particular interest in instantiating the single application method described above is the class of cyclic addition mechanism described by the the mathematics of the Trochoid and its subordinate classes. A Trochoid is class of Roulette defined by the tracing of a point on a circle that is rotated with friction upon the perimeter of another circle. The generating point of this curve is any point fixed with respect to the circles in question. Further definition of the radii and generating point creates subclasses of the Trochoid, such as Hypotrochoids, and Epitrochoids, and thence Epicyclodes, and Hypocloids and further Limacons, Rosettas/Rose, Trisectrix, Cycloids, Cayleys, Tricuspoids, and Trifoliums, to name but some of the major subclasses. By changing the defining parameters for these Trochoids, one can generate a myriad of different cyclic shapes with many interesting properties. Some examples off potentially interesting (for the current application) Trochoids is shown in
(93) That one specific Trochoid or another may be used for the purpose of engine design is not specifically new: the Wankel engine is a particular well known Trochoid used to instantiate a successful (if not particularly efficient) engine design. Nor is it all all true that all Trochoids can be used as the basis for an engine with any particular desirable qualities. What is true, is that through the spectral decomposition of the volume as illustrated in
(94) By way of example,
(95) One aspect not illustrated in
(96) Efficiency of the CarnotDiesel Cycle Engine
(97) At the end of all this design work, we now want to know the resulting efficiency of the new engine. As mentioned earlier, Applicant concurs with Tinker's revised physical theory of the thermal engine, and it is used to compute efficiency estimates for our new Carnot-Diesel engine. In particular we model the efficiency of the Differential Configuration as shown in the figures above with a Compression Ratio of 10, an Expansion Ratio of 20, and other parameters as used by Tinker with appropriate modifications as described below. The results are shown in
(98) To examine this plot, we begin with the lowest efficiency curve and work our way up. The lowest efficiency curve (upside down triangle markers) is the computed efficiency of a conventional Otto and Diesel engines using Tinker's model with a derived exhaust pressure ratio of =0.2323. The exhaust pressure ratio is the ratio of the pressure at point 1 in the cycle plot of
(99) Next we look at the second least efficient curve, in
(100) The second striking feature of the curve is that the efficiency at conventional compression ratios around 19 is about 56%. This is a significant increase in efficiency and since it is based on experimentally validated equations, we actually have a legitimate right to expect these to be realizable efficiency numbers. To ensure that we have not violated Physics, the third least efficient curve (curve with 0 symbols) plots the Otto Cycle efficiency with the old efficiency equation for these expansion ratios. We see that despite the improved efficiency of the New Cycle curve, it still has not even reached the efficiency of the Otto Cycle engine using the old efficiency equation, which suggests there is yet more efficiency to be had.
(101) In fact, our aforementioned estimate of a=2 is just that: an estimate. If we substitute the correct value of =2.sup. for an adiabatic expansion, we get the fourth least efficient (second most efficient) curve (curve with upward pointing triangles). This curve predicts a phenomenal increase in efficiency to over 80% at a expansion ratio of 19. This is certainly higher than the Otto Cycle efficiency, but then we should expect this because our new engine is not an Otto engine but a Carnot-like engine. Again to ensure we are not violating Physics, we plot the Carnot Cycle efficiency in the top curve of
(102) Examine Changing the Equation of State for Thermal Engines
(103) The various mechanical linkages described in the previous task may go far to achieving our goal of instantiating the Carnot Cycle. However, there is another interesting variant we would like to explore, and that is by changing the equation of state for the working gas in the thermal engine. Normally this might be considered to entail a change of working gas. But for various pragmatic reasons we really don't want to do that unless absolutely necessary. Rather, we would like to produce a change of working gas response that produces a net effect of mimicking a change in the effective equation of state for the engine's working gas.
(104) Consider the Otto Cycle engine shown in
(105) When the pressure is low (i.e. below the pressure needed to exceed the pre-tensioned Idler spring force), the working medium follows the standard Ideal Gas Law. When the pressure gets up to a certain predetermined value, Plmin the pre-tensioned spring force is matched and the spring 46 starts to compress with further increase in pressure. This point would happen at a point close to position 2 in
(106) An engine which very closely reproduces the Carnot Cycle is illustrated in
(107) Examination of
(108) Two key differences are now noted between this design and other thermal engines: We have introduced a high capacity cooler INTO the working gas, and This cooler is fed with the coldest cooling fluid possible, directly from the engine radiator
This Cooler defines Tc in the Carnot Cycle, and it has nothing short of a direct impact on the net efficiency via the efficiency equation for the Carnot Cycle. Additionally, this Cooler needs to be designed in such a manner that it removes heat at a specified rate to maintain an Isothermal process from during path 1-2. Piston P.sub.R may also be outfitted with displacement fingers to push residual gas out of the Cooler's passages upon complete movement to the left.
(109) With the Cooler in place, the right piston, P.sub.R and left Piston, P.sub.L, execute a coordinated displacement to the left in
(110) We are now at point 2 of Carnot Cycle in
(111) The system is now at point 3 of the Carnot Cycle in
(112) The system is now at point 4 of the Carnot Cycle in
(113) The Carnot Cycle is now complete. A pumping process is subsequently performed to bring the system back to a state where the Carnot Cycle can be repeated. This consists of opening an exhaust valve near the cooler, sweeping the left volume clear of exhaust by moving the left piston P.sub.L up to the Cooler, closing the exhaust valve, opening the intake valve on the other side of the Cooler, and retracting the right piston P.sub.R to draw in a fresh charge of air.
(114) The design presented here is also not necessarily mechanically optimum, but presents a design concept that can emulate a Carnot Cycle quite closely. Note that as a minimum, the mechanical movement to instantiate the above cycle could be implemented with cams.
(115) Turbine/Ramjet/PDE Carnot Cycle Engine Concept
(116) As it turns out, the turbine engine may be most amenable to Carnot Cycle conversion. This is because the pressure-volume curve in a turbine engine can be flexibly varied through design of the compressor stages, turbine stages and engine diameter as a function of the station position along the airflow. What is missing in turbine engines is instantiation of mechanisms to force the engine to follow the Carnot Cycle instead to the Brayton Cycle.
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(118) The other change needed is for the fuel combustor to be removed and replaced with a multitude of smaller burners 74 that are distributed among or integrated with the forward turbine stages 76. This approach adds heat gradually while the gas is expanding to create the isothermal process needed for path 3-4 of the Carnot Cycle in
(119) If we can instantiate the Carnot Cycle in a turbine engine, it is expected that it can also be instantiated in a Ramjet, since the basic processes are the same, only using ram pressure instead of an overt physical compressor section. The insights gained here may also aid in devising a more efficient PDE-like engine. For example, the air charge could be further cooled upon entry to mimic path 1-2 in
(120) Other means that direct mechanical intervention can serve to improve efficiency in thermal engines. Early compression evaporative cooling and time/phase profile metered fuel injection can make the new engine's cycle match as closely as possible to the Carnot Cycle. There are two general classes of evaporative cooling injection that might be employed in our new engines: a full injection and a partial injection. A full injection would input the complete fuel load into the early part of the compression stroke, and a partial injection just part of it. The full injection might be a new way to fuel gasoline engines since with their lower compression ratio the fuel will not ignite upon compression but only when the spark plug fires. We will want to quantify the efficiency improvement and heat rejection improvement since this is potentially a retrofittable modification to gasoline engines, or at least a straightforward one to develop for manufacturing. The partial injection would not unload the whole fuel charge, but likely as much as possible without causing a pre-ignition event in high compression ratio engines. This also introduces a possible new way of producing a lean burn process in the engine. The partial injection will have a very long time (comparatively speaking) to evaporate and mix with the air, thereby forming a very uniform lean ratio mix. When the main injection just prior to at TDC occurs, it acts like a high fuel ratio source for the ignition, in effect acting like a stratified charge arrangement. We use these new injection schema to determine what the injector requirements need to be to implement them, and then assess the state of the art (SOTA) in injector technology to address these requirements.
(121) There are two general approaches within the evaporative cooling injection scheme, mostly within the context of the COTS hardware. The first method is to convert a gasoline Otto engine to incorporate the evaporative cooling injection, and the second is to convert a Diesel engine into an Otto engine that incorporates the evaporative cooling injection.
(122) The first approach would take a small gasoline engine and add an injector to the side of cylinder near the head, ensuring that the injector is flush to the surface of the cylinder to avoid contact with the piston. The carburetor or normal fuel injector would be run dry or deactivated respectively. The new injector would then become the sole source of fuel for the engine, but it would be timed to inject fuel after the intake valve has closed. The new fuel injector would nominally be of the newer electrical injecting type so that the injection timing may be easily controlled with a simple electrical signal modification. An injector evaluation kit from one of the several OEMs is the ideal source for this injector hardware.
(123) The second approach would be to do the reverse: that is, to take a Diesel engine and turn it into a gasoline engine. The reason for doing this might be to use the injector system that is already built into the Diesel. The injector would be reposition to the side of cylinder near the head same as above. Its timing would have to be shifted by about 90 degrees to produce the injection at the proper time. In place of the fuel injector in the head, we would place a spark plug and associated after-market ignition system to ignite the fuel. A throttle or Venturi limit plate would limit the air intake to lower the effective compression ratio and thereby prevent pre-ignition of the fuel.
(124) In addition to cooling of the early compression phase via evaporative or conductive spray cooling, smart conventional cooling practice can also contribute to the efficiency of an engine. In this regard, we desire to provide extra conductive or convective cooling for the early compression phase. Counterpoised, we might also prefer to have some preferential heating for the early expansion phase. Engineers have for many years attempted to preferentially cool intake manifolds, but this is cooling that happens before the working medium is compressed. Such cooling may help increase the air/fuel charge in an engine cycle, but it does little to enhance efficiency. Instead, the desired cooling must happen in the compression phase and likewise any ancillary heating must happen in the expansion phase. One can contemplate conductive and convective cooling means wherein if the intake charge preferentially contacts one wall of a combustion chamber versus the other walls, then one could preferentially cool that wall and counterpoised, for heating the wall most in contact with the working medium for heating during the expansion phase.
(125) This approach may be difficult to realize in conventional cylindrical engines where working medium is turbulent and substantially in contact with all walls all the time. However in certain engine designs the method described above could actually be made to work quite nicely. In particular, rotary engines in general are disposed to implement and exploit this method more easily than might be done in other engines.
(126) In an analogous manner additional heating could be contemplated for the early part of the expansion phase by selecting that portion 80 of the Wankel enclosure wall to heat preferentially as shown in
(127) Extreme Regenerative Miller-Like Cycle
(128) An alternate embodiment of the concepts herein is to exploit an extreme form of Miller cycle with regeneration. We propose to use the revelations and insights described herein to design one or more entirely new classes of thermal engines with significantly higher efficiency than prior engine technologies have been able to deliver. As a spin-off of this higher efficiency we anticipate a noticeably higher power density simply because we will be extracting much more power per cycle and per unit fuel than a conventional engine. Additionally, this engine will be remarkably quieter than prior engines thereby meeting the low noise requirements. This lower noise output is a another spin-off benefit from the higher expansion ratio which will significantly lower the cylinder pressure at the time the exhaust valve opens (because its converting more of that pressure to work via the larger expansion ratio). A lower exhaust valve pressure differential then produces far less noise than a conventional engine that usually has hundreds of PSI pressure still in the cylinder at exhaust valve opening.
(129) There are numerous specific embodiments that our new engine could take. All that is explicitly required is that there are two independent but coupled volume producing cyclic processes that follow the guidelines derived from
(130) The basic operating principle is illustrated in
(131) This design may appear similar to some other designs that have been patented or are under development by others, but it is fundamentally different in the important ways guided by Tinker's revelations. The proof of this is that whereas other similar designs may claim a couple of ten percent improvement in efficiency, this design could achieve close to 75% efficiency. The key to this is that the piston stroke is two to three times greater than normal, and the effective compression stroke is about .sup.rd the expansion stroke. Therefore we are doing just what Tinker suggests: minimize the compression stroke energy and maximize the expansion stroke.
(132) Here we keep a very simple standard engine design and emulate the Tinker physics with appropriate venting control of the head valves. This design would use a 4 valve per cylinder arrangement and would repurpose the valves with appropriate ducting of vented exhaust gasses and fuel/air mixtures. Nominally, two intake valves are used to ingest air during the Intake phase. All other valves are closed. In the first part of the Compression stroke, a repurposed Exhaust valve opens to allow transfer of some low pressure partially compressed air into the regenerator. Such repurposing of the valving may be accomplished by custom ground camshafts.
(133) After about a half to rds of the gas has been transferred, that valve closes and compression continues. The geometry of the crank shaft and piston rods is such that the compression will achieve a normal amount of compression (about 10:1) on the remaining charge of air in the cylinder. In this way, the compression stroke can be made to look completely normal to all the engine controls, suggesting little change in the emissions control systems to accommodate these modifications.
(134) Once the gas is compressed, fuel is introduced via Direct Injection, just as in a Diesel. If Diesel fuel is used the compression ratio will be higher than the aforementioned factor of 10:1. In this particular illustration we are assuming Direct Injection (Diesel or Gasoline DI) although the design can be tailored to use regular port injection either through a stratified charge arrangement or by expanding the cycles into a 6-Stroke arrangement. A 2-Stroke arrangement shown in
(135) a) Early part of power stroke (4,
(136) b) Later part of power stroke (4) a valve is opened to allow the regenerator's hot pressurized air into the cylinder for expansion.
(137) c) This hot air reacts with combustion products to improve burn and reduce pollution, along with a pressure boost.
(138) d) Hot air from regenerator 90 also helps purge the cylinder, making way for fresh charge, and increases air flow for improve scavenging.
(139) e) variable valving and porting can improve performance at different power levels.
(140) f) A turbocharger 96 is optional, but will improve performance. Turbo will need to be of low head pressure design.
(141) Recalling that this engine has a large expansion volume (in relation to the actual compressed volume), the Burn phase 94 will reach a point where it starts to run out of pressure. At this point, the aforementioned repurposed Exhaust valve will open again. While the engine was undergoing its latter-compression stroke and early expansion stroke, the early transferred air was sitting in the regenerator absorbing heat from the exhaust, and developing even more pressure. This pressure will not be nearly as great as the high pressure part of the expansion stroke, but it will provide a welcome boost to the long power stroke and expansion phase just when it is needed. This hot air serves a second very important purpose, and that is to over oxygenate the hot gasses in the expand phase. This has the effect of burning off pollutants, thereby producing a particularly clean exhaust. As mentioned earlier, because of the large Expansion ratio, the final exhaust pressure is much lower than a traditional engine, suggesting that the noise level will be much lower in this engine.
(142) A six and eight stroke version of this engine become apparent as illustrated in
(143) a) Intake #2 can allow a second additional compression into regenerator to increase its pressure and decrease compressive work
(144) b) Power stroke has 2 halves, first closed valves/ports, the second half powered by hot gas from regenerator
(145) c) Similarly to other embodiments otherwise
(146) With respect to the 8-stroke version as shown in
(147) a) Combines Otto/Diesel and Stirling/Erickson like cycles
(148) b) Similar to other cycles, embodiments otherwise
(149) c) Benefit is 2 power strokes per 8 cycles (just like 4 stroke Otto) but now 2nd stroke (cylinder 112) is free (no gas) and has reduced compression stroke energy. An exhaust stroke resulting from this power stroke may be fed to regenerator 102.
(150) Upon complete expansion, the other non-repurposed exhaust valve opens to release the exhaust through piping in the regenerator to keep it hot. Note that the regenerator is small. In fact, the default concept is for the regenerator to be an exterior pipe within which the exhaust pipe is passed, or vice versa. The actual embodiment of the Regenerator (
(151) a) This design is for 4 valve/cylinder heads having intake valves 114 and exhaust valves 116. An ideal embodiment might use a 5 valve head with an extra valve 118 for the regenerator.
(152) b) Regenerator replaces header (it becomes header).
(153) c) Regenerator is optimized to maximize heat transfer from hot exhaust through pipe. Some options include: 1) Use of cyclonic flow around inner pipe 120. 2) Use of turbulence via baffles in chamber 122, 3) Use of fins in chamber, 4) Use of long thin/narrow chamber to maximize surface area for the volume used.
(154) d) Possible entry valve 118 could be a ball or cylinder valve with variable aperture or timing to adjust used volume in regenerator.
(155) An alternate embodiment of the regenerator could use a mechanical displacer. In this regard, the addition of the displacer in the regenerator would function to move the air to a hotter section of the regenerator from its entry point which would be cooler, thus helping to ensure that the air is not prematurely heated while the valve is open from the compression means to the regeneration, as that would have an adverse impact on the compression phase efficiency.
(156) In fact, an additional pair of strokes could be added (8-stroke engine) wherein the 7.sup.th stroke is a Stirling-like power stroke fed from the regenerator and the 8-stroke is a Stirling-like exhaust stroke. Obviously various combinations of these strokes and cycles can be made to achieve several variations on this theme, all with improved efficiency and potentially higher performance in other parameters as well.
(157) Turbine Enhancement of Expansion Ratio
(158) The purpose of this section is to disclose yet an additional means for designing and producing a new engine that has radically higher efficiency than other engines in existence today. An additional purpose of the present invention is to also provide for a capability to quite easily retrofit existing engines to produce much higher efficiency than before the retrofit. This retrofitted efficiency is not likely to be as high as might be attained in an embodiment designed from scratch to use the teachings of this invention. But the efficiency obtained will still be a significant improvement much larger than attainable by most other means.
(159) The fundamental principles underlying the current invention are the same as those disclosed above. The teachings of Tinker and the aforementioned disclosure leads to a number of underlying principles for increasing the efficiency of thermal engines. But perhaps the most powerful of these is the principle that the Compression Ratio (Compression phase of the Otto cycle for example) of an engine need not be the same as the Expansion Ratio (Power Stroke of the Otto cycle for example), and furthermore that the Expansion Ratio should be made as large as possible in relation to the Compression Ratio. This decoupling of Compression Ratio from Expansion Ratio enables a dramatic increase in the efficiency of thermal engines of a factor of two or even more than three, depending on the specifics of the engine design.
(160) One of the draw backs to various means of having decoupled Compression and Expansion Ratios is that such decoupling typically results in the need to develop substantially a new engine. There are some means by which an engine might be retrofit to accommodate this requirement, but they are difficult, complicated and in the end not usually economical since essentially an entire engine rebuild is needed.
(161) An alternative method is to provide a bolt on approach that could be applied as a retrofit and also be used in production design. Achievement of this goal might be obtained through a couple of possible designs such as described in the aforementioned Provisional Patents, but another one is through a new embodiment of the familiar automotive turbo charger which is the subject of the present invention.
(162) Operation of the conventional turbo charger is well known and well understood. Essentially an exhaust plenum collects the spent exhaust flow from the cylinders in the engine, and directs the flow to a common turbine that then drives a compressor to in turn pressurize the intake air. The pressurized intake air flows more volume through the intake system and over charges the cylinder with air or air/fuel mixture. This increases the power of the engine because more air/fuel are burned on each cycle. Interestingly, a turbocharger can also increase the efficiency of an engine. This realization has led Ford to include a combined Super Charger and Turbo Charger in their new 2009 models.
(163) Although the Ford efficiency enhancements are notable, they are not dramatic. The reason for this is because they do not really address the core requirements for efficiency except in a serendipitous way. In fact, as designed, even this new arrangement is incapable of providing really significant improvement in efficiency. The reason for this is two fold. First, there is no real intent to decouple the compression and expansion ratios and therefore maximal efficiency improvement is not possible, and second, the turbine is in the wrong position to effect significant efficiency improvement.
(164) In order to use the aforementioned principles, the position of the turbine must be changed. Currently the turbine is so far down stream of the exhaust valve, that only the static pressure and some minimal dynamic pressure remain in the exhaust flow to power a turbo charger. This is actually ideal for turbo charger applications because a compressor could not use much more power than what is generated in conventional turbo charger turbines. However, if we want to increase efficiency, this is not good enough. The problem is that between the distance of the exhaust valve and the turbine, the volume is about the same size as the volume of the cylinder. This means that when the exhaust valves opens, there is a huge loss of enthalpy and with that loss goes any potential of recovering the energy therein contained for useful work. Therefore, if we wish to minimize the loss of enthalpy and maximize the energy extraction for efficiency, then the turbine should be placed as close to the exhaust valve as possible, or even integrated with it. This will minimize enthalpy loss and maximize efficiency by permitting the turbine to extract the maximum amount of energy from the exhaust gas.
(165) The mere addition of a turbine to the exhaust port then effectively increases the expansion ratio as was desired in the first place. Placing it very close to the pressurized exhaust gas ensures that there is no loss except to the mechanical output of the turbine, thus maximizing the efficiency of the additional expansion ratio that extracts additional power. Note that there is no real or significant increase in back pressure (maybe less) because when the exhaust valve opens, the intake valve is still closed ensuring all the back force is applied only to the piston, not back pressure into the intake manifold. A number of possible embodiments are disclosed in
(166) Although a mechanical linkage could be provided (maybe with a torque converter and variable ratio transmission, etc.) in order to couple the extra extracted power to the drive train (and this is one embodiment of this invention), a more interesting approach is a hybrid vehicle implementation. In this case a generator/alternator is coupled to the turbine thus producing electrical power. The electrical power can drive accessories, or charge a battery or directly drive an adjunct or primary electric motor or any combination of these. An electronic controller monitors and controls and routes the electric power as needed. A hydraulic or air pump might be considered in place of the electric pump too, although these then require more divergence from the standard hybrid configuration. Basically any means that might be able to capture the power of the turbine and then route that additional power to useful purpose is a potential embodiment. Some of that power can also be used to power a compressor, so this embodiment offers the combination of both higher power and much higher efficiency.
(167) Note that to minimize the volume in the exhaust pipe between the exhaust valve and the turbine-alternator/generator, nominally a separate turbine is needed for each cylinder, and these may in turn have individual alternator/generators, or the turbines could be ganged on one/few shaft(s) to a common generator or drive train for mechanical coupling to the drive train. In the case of a V-like piston arrangement, the turbine might be placed between the cylinders and might service the exhaust ports of both cylinders, thus requiring only one turbine for the two cylinders. Similar arrangements might be possible for other geometries with the potential of one turbine providing the extra expansion ratio for all cylinders if the cylinders are disposed around the turbine to enable zero or near zero distance between the exhaust ports and the turbine. Any mix or match or even suboptimal arrangements might be contemplated where the turbine is very close to one or a couple of cylinders, but maybe farther away from the others.
(168) For example,
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REFERENCES
(175) 1. Tinker, Occult Parasitic Energy Loss in Heat Engines, Frank A. Tinker, International Journal of Energy Research, 2007:31, 1441-1453. 2. U.S. Pat. No. 7,441,530 to Tinker. 3. US patent publication 2007/0227347, also to Tinker. 4. Thermodynamics, George A. Hawkins, John Wiley & Sons, New York, N.Y., 1946. 5. Thermodynamics, Kinetic Theory, and Statistical Thermodynamics, Francis W. Sears and Gerhard L. Salinger, Addison-Wesley, Reading, M A, 1975. 6. On the Efficiency of Heat Engines, Frank A. Tinker, Da Vinci Research, LLC, PO 36683, Tucson, Ariz., 85740, (520) 219-5888, 2005. http://www.dvrhome.com/articles/Heat_Engine_Tinker.pdf 7. A New Look at High Compression Engines, C. F. Caris, E. E. Nelson, SAE Tech. Paper #590015. 8. Diesel Common Rail and Advanced Fuel Injection Systems, P. J. Dingle, M. D. Lai, SAE, 2005. 9. Thermal Load and Surface Temp. Anal. Of a Small HSDI Diesel, M. K. Inal, Proquest UMI, 2006.