Posted on 04/28/2003 6:10:21 AM PDT by John Jamieson
A Dual Mode, High Efficiency Engine, Based on a Standard 4-Cylinder Block
John R. Jamieson 4/28/2003
John R. Jamieson believes the engine configuration described in this paper is a unique and original idea. He hereby places this design in the Public Domain for the use of anyone who reduces the idea to practice. (Questions and comments may be addressed to JRJamieTX@wmconnect.com)
Background: For the past 100 years, engineers have known that high efficiency, internal combustion engines have two features that we rarely use in our current designs:
1. Close match between the normal load and max load. Such a design operates the engine at near wide open throttle most of the time. Current automotive design, however, is to use engines with 10 times the max load as nominal in order to provide brisk acceleration. The customers demand it. Efforts have been made (Cadillac in the late 70s) to shutdown cylinders in large engines to increase the cruise efficiency. These efforts were only partially successful due to the fact that all of the friction loses in the unused cylinders remained and the control systems of the day were much simpler than todays.
2. Much higher gas expansion ratios. The conventional designs require that the expansion ratio match the compression ratio, which is limited to 10:1 with modern gasoline. Beginning with the complex mechanical designs of James Atkinson in 1885-6 and continuing through the Wright Turbo-Compound aircraft engine of the early 1950s, engineers have tried to increase the expansion ratio and although all of these engines demonstrated increased fuel efficiency, all suffered from cost, weight, or reliability issues and none became popular. Present day Miller cycle engines extend the expansion ratio to about 15:1 and are used in some of our most fuel-efficient automobiles. Even diesel engines, with their inherent 20:1 expansion ratio, can benefit from further expansion ratio increases, and a European engine manufacturer Scania is currently using turbo-compounding to do just that. That engine has a Specific Fuel Consumption (SFC) of .32 pounds/hr-hour.
3. The author experimented with 2-cylinder engines based on a 4-cylinder 1.9 liter Opel in the 1970s. This car demonstrated about a 40% increase in fuel economy, but suffered poor horsepower performance, barely reaching the 55mph top speed of the day. Never the less, the car was driven to the Kennedy Space Center every day for over a year. About 2 years ago, the author started wondering if the two extra cylinders could be used for additional gas expansion, and the present idea was born. A 1987 Toyota Corolla was purchased and the conversion began, only to be never completed because of a combination of health issues, and more pressing time demands.
Concept: A dual mode engine based on existing 4 cylinder designs, and requiring only cylinder head and control system changes. In its simplest form, such an engine would have 3 valves per cylinder. A cross flow head would be used with 4 conventional intake valves, 4 conventional exhaust valves, and 4 new transfer valves. The 4 transfer valves would all connect to a single transfer manifold either located internally in the head (difficult to cast) or externally.
Mode 1: Cold start, on ramp acceleration, hills, high speed, high load, passing. 2 liter, conventional, 4 cylinder 100 horsepower @ 5000rpm Compression Ratio 10:1, Expansion Ratio 10:1 SFC .6 pound/hp-hour
In Mode 1, conventional operation at full power and rpm would use the 8 conventional valves, while the transfer valves remained closed. All four cylinders would supply power.
Mode 2: Warm start, idle, moderate city driving, level cruise to 70 mph. 1 liter, double expansion, 2 cylinder 33 horsepower @ 2500rpm Compression Ratio 10:1, Expansion Ratio 20:1 SFC .4 pound/hp-hour
Mode 2, low power, high efficiency operation would operate cylinders 1 and 4 in a conventional mode, except that their exhaust valves would remain closed and instead each cylinder would use its transfer valve, to route exhaust gases to the two center cylinders (2 & 3) for further expansion. 3 transfer valves would be open during the exhaust stroke of either cylinder 1 or 4. Cylinders 2 and 3 then act as a two stroke slave engine, providing about 33% of a normal power stroke. The engine would still have 4 power strokes, but two are weaker than the two main ones. At the completion of the slave power stroke and during the next intake stroke on 1 or 4, the center cylinders perform an exhaust stroke through their exhaust valves. The 4-stroke cycle has become a 5-stroke cycle with two power strokes.
The combined efficiency improvement due to the reduced displacement and 20:1 expansion ratio, of the engine in Mode 2, is estimated to be 50%. A small 4-passenger car that requires 12 hp at 60mpg or 15 hp at the engine, could be expected to deliver about 60 mpg at cruise.
Two Step Development Plan
The technological challenge of switching modes during operation is far and away the most difficult and should be saved until after a pure Mode 2 demonstration has been completed, through road test.
Prototype 1 Modify an existing 4 cylinder, 8 valve engine to Mode 2 operation. Basically requires the following modifications: 1. Permanently disable fuel and air intake on cylinders 2 & 3 by grinding off the appropriate cam lobes, leaving the valves in place. 2. Permanently disable fuel injection (if present) and ignition of cylinders 2 & 3, leave plugs in place. 3. Twin cylinders 2 & 3 by cutting a port between them in the head area separating the cylinders. Cylinders 2 & 3 should operate as a single double size cylinder for gas expansion. 4. Remove one exhaust valve from cylinder 2 or 3 and plug or weld its valve guide to reseal the combined chambers. Via a small external transfer manifold, route the exhaust gas from cylinders 1 and 4 to this port. 5. The remaining exhaust valve provides all exhaust gas exiting the engine and connects to the exhaust pipe. The camshaft has to be modified for this remaining valve so that it has two lobes at 180 degrees. 6. Modify any engine controls and software as required to get it running. Road test for expected engine efficiency improvements. Exhaust gas temperature should be much reduced; re-verify catalytic converter operation.
Note that only 5 valves are now used and only modest changes are required to the cam shaft. The Dual Mode engine obviously requires much more serious changes. (Estimated cost of Prototype 1 development and test: $100,000).
Prototype 2 Modify an existing or build a new 12 valve head for a crossflow 4 cylinder engine. Although purely mechanical valve controls might be possible, the prototype will be much easier to develop with electrically controlled valves (Sturman Industries has demonstrated such a camless valve train). A custom engine valve controller will perform mode switch over and all valve control. Road test for smooth mode transition and continued max performance with high cruise efficiency. (Estimated cost of Prototype 2 development and test: $1,000,000).
Note: The author expects the same idea will work on V8 engines, but not easily on other configurations.
Comments welcome.
John
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I would have thought the exhaust pressure would have been too low for a second expansion cycle. Obviously you have made the calculation do demonstrate otherwise.
Is the fuel efficiency calculation just an extrapolation based upon the effective expansion ratio?
I think you'd better add another zero to your proposed development cost. Sturman will want your million just to design the valve and build a few protoypes. Then you'll still have to D&B the cylinder head and engine control system. Then you'll need a dyno with emissions capability. At that point you'll be ready to start engine development.
Bosch, Delphi and a few others have deep pockets and buildings full of PHd's working on future IC engine configurations. If they are not working on this concept, why do you think that is? If they are working on it, how do you propose to compete?
My professor (mechanical engineering) at Cornell in 1971 experimented with this notion. He had a V-8 running on 6 cylinders and two as 'expanders'. I would not be surprised if he had a patent or two. My 51-year-old brain is refusing to give up his name but eventually it might.
--Boris
Nobody had heard of catalytic converters, and the notion of an engine that would not start unless its computer was working right would have been thought insane.
--Boris
Hey, I'm just a rocket engineer. In rockets you can 'overexpand', i.e., allow the exit static pressure to drop below ambient.
How do you do that in a car? A high expansion ratio kind of implies a high compression ratio, or am I missing something?
--Boris
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