Pitifully low rpm limit due to valve train constraints for anything smaller than the scale of ocean going liner engines.
External main bearings and metered feed to big ends via crank drillings.
Pitifully low rpm limit due to valve train constraints for anything smaller than the scale of ocean going liner engines.
External main bearings and metered feed to big ends via crank drillings.
Anything but simple.
Yeah, I was wondering about that. What sort of hydrogen mass/volume would have to be injected into a cylinder? Obviously it would vary with cylinder size, etc. but it seems it might be difficult on a higher revving engine. It's not too difficult to meter the injection of a non-compressible liquid fuel, but a gas is another story.....Secondly, injecting a gas against rising cylinder pressure is a metering nightmare.
You can create it easily with things as simple as washers or razor blades and a lemonade bottle with solar panels or battery, but once the bottle is full compressing and storing is not as easy as dealing with air.coaster wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 10:38An electronic engineer i knew took carbon rods from an dolphin torch battery and used them as electrodes in a sealed water vessel, a bridge rectifier fed dc current to the electrodes from 220vac mains.
It directly ran a 180cc side valve briggs and stratton, the motor ran but overheated.
Given hydrogen is so easy to create on demand, lets see some small capacity bench motors pushed to the limit?
There might be given that NOx reduces slightly above stoich. Possibly acceptable/preferable for full load operation but the very high NOx region between phi > 0.8 and phi = 1.05 would have to be avoided.
Why so? Is it due to the difference in specific heat ratio relative to liquid HCs?
What kind of temperature drop do you envisage?gruntguru wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 09:22It is also possible to add the hydrogen at a very low temperature since it has to be expanded from a very high storage pressure (Toyota Mirai stores at 700 bar - 70 bar after 90% of capacity consumed). The low temperature would reduce the charge volume displaced by hydrogen.
AFAIK there is no existing injector suitable, Because its bulk (due to having to pass a gas) exposes it to combustion heat it cannot withstand. Additionally, whatever is deployed as control 'pintle' will inevitably be large and thus heavy with probable limitations on opening and closing times which will limit rpm potential. At a minimum, you'd be looking at solenoid valve systems (ie, camless) for hardware more than to conventional injector technology.
Injecting all the way to ignition time will likely result in insufficient mixing time (which cannot be augmented by turbulence as that would overly increase combustion speed) and rich spots will ramp up NOx.gruntguru wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 09:22Cylinder pressure does not present a metering challenge. Flow through the direct injector is choked (supersonic) and insensitive to backpressure until cylinder pressure exceeds 50% of injection pressure. At say 30 bar injection pressure, injector flow would remain constant until cylinder pressure exceeded 15 bar (which is about time for ignition).
Possibly for (limited) full load operation where NOx falls again - in the same way that rich is deployed at full load with gasoline to suppress detonation.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 10:01surely no-one would now have a hydrogen engine fuelled to stoichiometric ?
How much boost can be utilised before NOx becomes problematic? Diesel is lean burn but is plagued with NOx due to the pressures deployed. Temperature is only half of the NOx problem. Pressure is the other.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 10:01for higher efficiency and low NOx it would be designed around heat dilution ie to run eg at 2 (and 3, 4 etc) Lambda
using very high boost (ie 2 stage chargers)
like current F1 but a big step beyond
Hydrogen in this context will always be gaseous.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 10:01(and lean running might allow fuelling in gas not liquid form)
There's a danger of overstating it. 180:1/34:1 = 5.3. A turn down ratio of 10 is more common on existing engines. If the highest load was with twice air compared to stoich (ie, 68:1) then the available turn down ratio is 2.6. Still helpful in reducing throttling losses on a 4T but increasing pumping losses on a 2T.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 10:01for most applications hydrogen's big thing is more the outstanding 'mixture' range than the outstanding heat value
The bigger concern - with 4T at least - is the above finding its way to the crankcase. Which supercharging will further aggravate.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 10:01what I didn't say some days ago is that .....
cyclic hydrogen combustion can produce oxides other than the dihydrogen oxide better known as water
these other oxides are presumed to be short-lived in air but anyway would be far fewer with lean fuelling
Stoichiometric operation at full load and with DI would offer 20% higher power than the equivalent gasolene fueled engine so the reduced cost of NA hardware wul be attractive. Stoich operation also allows the use of a reduction catalyst - possibly with some technique to permit lean part-load without production of NOX in the cat.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 10:01surely no-one would now have a hydrogen engine fuelled to stoichiometric ?
Primary due to the higher heating value of air when burned with hydrogen. There are other factors like higher useable CR, higher flame speed, higher diffusivity (better mixing) and smaller quenching distance (burns closer to cylinder wall) which all contribute.
Trick question? I had to look it up - and learned that Hydrogen has a negative Joule-Thomson coefficient at room temperature.What kind of temperature drop do you envisage?gruntguru wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 09:22It is also possible to add the hydrogen at a very low temperature since it has to be expanded from a very high storage pressure (Toyota Mirai stores at 700 bar - 70 bar after 90% of capacity consumed). The low temperature would reduce the charge volume displaced by hydrogen.
Not suggesting that you would. High diffusivity of H2 helps mixing.Injecting all the way to ignition time will likely result in insufficient mixing time (which cannot be augmented by turbulence as that would overly increase combustion speed) and rich spots will ramp up NOx.gruntguru wrote: ↑08 Dec 2021, 09:22Cylinder pressure does not present a metering challenge. Flow through the direct injector is choked (supersonic) and insensitive to backpressure until cylinder pressure exceeds 50% of injection pressure. At say 30 bar injection pressure, injector flow would remain constant until cylinder pressure exceeded 15 bar (which is about time for ignition).