I agree with GG, if you calculate the area under the cylinder pressure curve with detonation it's the same or less than regular combustion - no additional work is being done on the piston over a cycle even though instantaneous loads are higher. Cylinder pressures push the piston the other way, towards the sump. It's the inertia forces that make pistons go through cylinder heads and they are unrelated to detonation.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Oct 2020, 21:39Detonation may not add much meaningful energy to the piston(I disagree, seen detonation launch enough pistons through a cylinder head), it can have a very powerful effect at the turbine.
https://arc.aiaa.org/doi/abs/10.2514/6.2011-577
If you can time the detonations, and the associated turbine acceleration you could increase MGU-H harvesting.
doesn't the manifold have equal and 'tuned' length branches ? (to preserve pulsing in the manifold)saviour stivala wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 11:17....The formula one engine turbocharger turbine is a ‘pressure’ turbine and not a pulse turbine since it converts ‘blow-down’ velocity energy in manifold collector into pressure energy. This conversion to pressure energy reflects on the scavenging ability of the cylinders.
Passed where, the void?Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 00:15I agree with GG, if you calculate the area under the cylinder pressure curve with detonation it's the same or less than regular combustion - no additional work is being done on the piston over a cycle even though instantaneous loads are higher. Cylinder pressures push the piston the other way, towards the sump. It's the inertia forces that make pistons go through cylinder heads and they are unrelated to detonation.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Oct 2020, 21:39Detonation may not add much meaningful energy to the piston(I disagree, seen detonation launch enough pistons through a cylinder head), it can have a very powerful effect at the turbine.
https://arc.aiaa.org/doi/abs/10.2514/6.2011-577
If you can time the detonations, and the associated turbine acceleration you could increase MGU-H harvesting.
The paper you linked refers to a gas turbine. In a piston engine all knock induced cylinder pressure oscillations have passed by the time the exhaust valve opens so the turbine can't tell the difference.
Why the need to categorize the turbine with a single word, 100% in a strictly defined and unidimensional mode of action? I like the “mixed flow” description.saviour stivala wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 14:43The turbine as used in a formula one engine is a pressure turbine since blow-down exhaust gasses velocity energy in manifold collector are converted to pressure energy.
The amplitudes decay as the volume increases and most of the fuel has been burned. By the time the exhaust valve opens it's all gone.godlameroso wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 16:28Passed where, the void?Mudflap wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 00:15I agree with GG, if you calculate the area under the cylinder pressure curve with detonation it's the same or less than regular combustion - no additional work is being done on the piston over a cycle even though instantaneous loads are higher. Cylinder pressures push the piston the other way, towards the sump. It's the inertia forces that make pistons go through cylinder heads and they are unrelated to detonation.godlameroso wrote: ↑13 Oct 2020, 21:39Detonation may not add much meaningful energy to the piston(I disagree, seen detonation launch enough pistons through a cylinder head), it can have a very powerful effect at the turbine.
https://arc.aiaa.org/doi/abs/10.2514/6.2011-577
If you can time the detonations, and the associated turbine acceleration you could increase MGU-H harvesting.
The paper you linked refers to a gas turbine. In a piston engine all knock induced cylinder pressure oscillations have passed by the time the exhaust valve opens so the turbine can't tell the difference.
I too happen to like the ‘mixed-flow’ type of turbine out of the three types of turbines suitable for exhaust gas turbochargers. (radial-flow, Axial-flow and Mixed-flow). But that doesn’t change the fact that the turbine used in a formula one turbocharger is a pressure turbine and not a blow-down turbine, which was the actual point of contention this ‘turbine type’ discussion.hollus wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 21:32Why the need to categorize the turbine with a single word, 100% in a strictly defined and unidimensional mode of action? I like the “mixed flow” description.saviour stivala wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 14:43The turbine as used in a formula one engine is a pressure turbine since blow-down exhaust gasses velocity energy in manifold collector are converted to pressure energy.
since the recently-mentioned contention came from me ..... again I contend .....saviour stivala wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 14:43The turbine as used in a formula one engine is a pressure turbine since blow-down exhaust gasses velocity energy in manifold collector are converted to pressure energy.
What style of exhaust did Mercedes run with in 2014 if it wasn't a log style?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑15 Oct 2020, 11:10since the recently-mentioned contention came from me ..... again I contend .....saviour stivala wrote: ↑14 Oct 2020, 14:43The turbine as used in a formula one engine is a pressure turbine since blow-down exhaust gasses velocity energy in manifold collector are converted to pressure energy.
the 'pulse' velocity energy isn't converted into pressure energy .....
as clearly the manifold design is intended to conserve the pulses - not to convert their kinetic energy into pressure energy
the pulses are eg supersonic not events in the Bernoulli range wherein velocity and pressure can conveniently be interchanged
if pulses are conserved the turbine is powered even if the mean exhaust pressure isn't above ambient pressure
the turbine receives a continuous train of exhaust velocity pulses, one from each cylinder
this is blowdown working of a turbine
blowdown working gives free power - because there is no exhaust 'back pressure'
this is what Wright wrote in the 1950s and (in their Turbo-Compound) proved 15000 times
(though some posts on this site said 'impossible')
a true 'log' manifold will cancel the pulses (by interference etc) - largely converting kinetic energy into heat/pressure energy
some c.2014 F1 manifolds were called 'log' manifolds by posters here - wrongly
interference comes from unequal exhaust path lengths - these manifolds had equal or almost equal path lengths
traditionally it was better/easier to sacrifice the pulses and design for steady raised exhaust pressure - pressure working
turbine design for pressure-only working is presumably somewhat different to design for blowdown-only working
these days as in F1 many exhaust system designs combine both types of working
so-called mixed flow
wellsaviour stivala wrote: ↑16 Oct 2020, 15:13A Yes. a blow-down turbine with each individual cylinder constant cross section exhaust pipe connected directly to turbine will produce no back pressure .....
B .....different exhaust piping connection systems from cylinder to turbine that makes a turbine a ‘blow-down’ turbine or a ‘pressure’ turbine.
C .....With waste-gates fully open the exhaust gasses bypassing the turbine, ‘second path-out’ the exhaust gasses are at atmospheric pressure, and with the exhaust gasses at atmospheric pressure no ‘recovery energy’ is possible by the turbine.