gruntguru take it for what you will but I think you should revise your exhaust gas temperature. The maximum continuous T5 (T5 is just a term used by this particular manufacturer for the temperature reading obtained between the first and second stage turbines) limit for normal dual engine running in our helicopters is 893 degrees Celsius. Our single engine max T5 is 926 degrees. Note that these figures are for the extremely restrictive world of aviation where things like engine limitations are kept quite conservative for obvious reasons. So that is 926 degrees C after having passed through one turbine and with the reliability being the main concern.gruntguru wrote:I disagree - we are almost certainly designing around the "sweet spot".Tommy Cookers wrote:but in principle we are not designing an engine around this sweet spot, we are designing around another spot because in principle the rules do not allow free choice of turbine power we are designing an engine to work around mean turbine power dictated by the 120 kW mu-k limit the mean turbine power required depends on how much mean mu-k power comes from braking recovery (minus spoolup) energy brake recovery is kept quite low by a torque limit rule (though BR is very circuit-specific) so about 90 kW seems to be needed from the turbine (90 kW mean throughout WOT time) this seems to match the iirc 80 kW (presumably continuous rating?) stated for the MM unit precedent shows axial turbine power adds up to 18% to crank power essentially 'free' ie with negligible loss of crankshaft power this is what blowdown running is all about (exhaust pressure not significantly above ambient after exhaust BDC) our mep and CR suggest we can have around 12-15% 'free' but to have 120 kW mu-k freely available we need more turbine power than this dictating a design that has raised exhaust pressure aka 'backpressure' (significantly above ambient throughout) other precedent shows this is competitive (backpressure with boost raised may cost no crankshaft power and increase turbine power) Merc exhaust suggests this (pressure running of the turbine), but F's and R's is compatible with this (an element of pressure)gruntguru wrote:That is correct. However there is a range of outcomes from "Maximise ICE crankshaft power regardless of turbine output" through to "Maximise turbine output regardless of crank output". Somewhere between these two is a sweet spot where total output is maximised. ICE crankshaft power will not be maximal at this sweet spot.
so the Honda exhaust system should tell us something
btw 120 kW assumes 95% efficiency at the motor (of electrical power to crankshaft by coupling gear) - so we might get 122 kW
With electrical efficiency of 95% for both MGUK and MGUH, nett turbine power would need to be 133 kW to supply 120 kW of work at the MGUH.
For 3.5 bar MAP, 3.0 bar exhAP, MAF = 0.056 kg/s, Exh MF = 0.059 kg/s, EGT = 800*C, turb & comp efficiencies = 0.8 :-
Compressor power = 90kW
Turbine power = 137kW
Nett power = 47kW
These numbers are steady flow (pressure turbine) so the turbine power will be higher courtesy of blowdown energy - say another 50kW, for a total Nett power of 97 kW. We are still 36kW short of the 133 required to drive the MGUK at 120kW continuously - the question is - is enough braking energy harvested to make up the shortfall (and provide some spare energy for spool up and emergency power techniques (where the compressor andthe MGUK ar both driven from the ES to maximise crankshaft power)). The answer is almost certainly no. Assuming (generously) that time under brakes is 25% of time under full throttle, and that harvesting is 120 kW throughout braking events, there will be 30kW available during full throttle events from braking regen'.
Even without the above analysis, it is known that the cars deplete the ES while running at race speed, so clearly any extra power from the MGUH would be useable.
For reference our 2 minute power T5 limit is 944 degrees C and the 30 second T5 limit is 996 degrees C. Note that the application date for engine certification was December 4th, 2003 with it being actually designed quite a while before that.
In light of what I know and the information provided I would think 1000 degrees C would be a safe bet for a maximum exhaust gas flow temp.