Wayne DR wrote:Tommy Cookers wrote:but 10-15% surplus air is not needed for full combustion in 2014 F1
IMO
The surplus air is needed, not for full combustion, but to increase the amount of energy recovered from the MGU-H. In a fuel limited system, a lower AFR is needed to run higher airflows, which in turn allows higher boost pressures, giving a larger delta P, which increases MGU-H output.
With partial stratification, the extra air will also provide thermal insulation to the cylinder walls, increasing the ICE's thermal efficiency, increasing the temperature of the exhaust gases, further increasing MGU-H output.
and ......
higher airflows would not allow higher boost pressure unless 'intercooled' to the same temperature (as the 'base' airflow)
otherwise the CR would have to be lowered
and eg 15% more airflow needs about 30% more supercharger work so requires 30% more cooling
many have seen intercooling as a dominant factor in the car package ?
BTW if people Google V Ganesan Internal Combustion Engines
.... Googling dissociation should also get this book at the right pages
they should find Fig 3.6 (page 115 in my copy) showing real engine BTE benefits (from leaning) fall far short of fuel-air theory
and Prof Ganesan's statement .... 'the maximum efficiency is within the lean zone very near the stoichiometric ratio'
Fig 14.1 shows that CO is already building at 10% lean and eg at 2% lean there is plenty
CO deters dissociation as per Ganesan's Chapter 3 section 5
so if, as many posts say, at 2% lean F1 will not fully combust then there will be plenty of CO and little dissociation
there seems to be always some intermittency (of combustion) that contributes to less than full combustion
this intermittency is worse as mixture strength is reduced even from rich to stoichiometric (says F1 Ferrari tests once linked in this thread)
though (as I have already suggested) DI should help relieve this