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موتورهاي ديزلي
موتورهاي ديزلي نسبت به موتورهاي
بنزيني ارزانتر و مقرون به صرفه تر هستند. موتور ديزلي فقط
هوا را دريافت داشته، آنرا فشرده کرده و بعد سوخت را درون
هواي فشرده تزريق مي نمايد. گرماي هواي فشرده فورآً سوخت
را روشن مي سازد. موتور بنزيني در نسبت 8:1 تا 12:1 فشرده
شده در حاليکه موتور ديزلي در نسبت 14:1 تا حداکثر 25:1
فشرده مي گردد. نسبت بالاي فشردگي موتور ديزلي سبب کارآيي
بهتر آن مي شود. موتور ديزلي فقط از تزريق سوخت مستقيم
استفاده مي نمايد. سوخت ديزلي مستقيماً وارد سيلندر مي
گردد. موتور ديزلي شمع نداشته فقط گرماي هواي فشرده است که
سوخت را در آن روشن مي سازد. يکي از تفاوتهاي بزرگ موتور
بنزيني و ديزلي تزريق سوخت آن مي باشد. بيشتر موتورهاي
ماشين از سوپاپ تزريق يا کاربراتور استفاده مي کنند.
بنابراين تمام سوخت در سيلندر بارگذاري شده سپس فشرده مي
گردد. فشردگي ترکيب سوخت / هوا نسبت فشردگي موتور را محدود
مي سازد. اگر فشردگي هوا خيلي زياد باشد ترکيب سوخت / هوا
فوراً مشتعل گشته و صداي تق تق را بوجود مي آورد. ديزل فقط
هوا را فشرده ساخته طوريکه نسبت فشردگي مي تواند زياد شود.
نسبت فشردگي زياد، نيروي زيادي را ايجاد خواهد نمود. سوخت
ديزلي سنگينتر بوده بتدريج تبخير مي گردد، نقطه جوش آن
بيشتر از نقطه جوش آب است، داراي اتمهاي کربن زيادي است
....
Diesel engines are more
efficient and cheaper to run than gasoline engines.
Learn what makes diesel engines
different!
One of the
most popular HowStuffWorks articles is How Car Engines
Work, which explains the basic principles behind
internal combustion, discusses the four-stroke cycle and
talks about all of the subsystems that help your car's
engine to do its job. One of the most common questions
asked (and one of the most frequent suggestions made in
the suggestion box) is, "What is the difference between
a gasoline and a diesel engine?"
If you
haven't already done so, you'll probably want to read
How Car Engines Work first, to get a feel for the basics
of internal combustion. But hurry back! In this edition
of HowStuffWorks, we're going to unlock the secrets of
the diesel!
The Diesel Cycle
Rudolf
Diesel
developed the idea for the diesel engine and obtained
the German patent for it in 1892. His goal was to create
an engine with high
efficiency. Gasoline engines had been
invented 1876 and, especially at that time, were not
very efficient.
The main
differences between the gasoline engine and the diesel
engine are:
A gasoline
engine intakes a mixture of gas and air, compresses it
and ignites the mixture with a spark. A diesel engine
takes in just air, compresses it and then injects fuel
into the compressed air. The heat of the compressed air
lights the fuel spontaneously.
A gasoline
engine compresses at a ratio of 8:1 to 12:1, while a
diesel engine compresses at a ratio of 14:1 to as high
as 25:1. The higher compression ratio of the diesel
engine leads to better efficiency.
Gasoline
engines generally use either carburetion, in which the
air and fuel is mixed long before the air enters the
cylinder, or port fuel injection, in which the fuel is
injected just prior to the intake stroke (outside the
cylinder). Diesel engines use direct fuel injection --
the diesel fuel is injected directly into the cylinder.
The
following animation shows the diesel cycle in action.
You can compare it to the animation of the gasoline
engine to see the differences:
Note that
the diesel engine has no spark plug, that it intakes air
and compresses it, and that it then injects the fuel
directly into the combustion chamber (direct injection).
It is the heat of the compressed air that lights the
fuel in a diesel engine.
In the
simplified animation above, the green device attached to
the left side of the cylinder is a fuel injector. However, the
injector on a diesel engine is its most complex
component and has been the subject of a great deal of
experimentation -- in any particular engine it may be
located in a variety of places. The injector has to be
able to withstand the temperature and pressure inside
the cylinder and still deliver the fuel in a fine mist.
Getting the mist circulated in the cylinder so that it
is evenly distributed is also a problem, so some diesel
engines employ special induction valves, pre-combustion
chambers or other devices to swirl the air in the
combustion chamber or otherwise improve the ignition and
combustion process.
One big
difference between a diesel engine and a gas engine is
in the injection process. Most car engines use port
injection or a carburetor rather than direct injection.
In a car engine, therefore, all of the fuel is loaded
into the cylinder during the intake stroke and then
compressed. The compression of the fuel/air mixture
limits the compression ratio of the engine -- if it
compresses the air too much, the fuel/air mixture
spontaneously ignites and causes knocking. A diesel
compresses only air, so the compression ratio can be
much higher. The higher the compression ratio, the more
power is generated.
Some diesel
engines contain a glow
plug of some sort (not shown in this figure).
When a diesel engine is cold, the compression process
may not raise the air to a high enough temperature to
ignite the fuel. The glow plug is an electrically heated
wire (think of the hot wires you see in a toaster) that
helps ignite the fuel when the engine is cold so that
the engine can start. According to Cley Brotherton, a
Journeyman heavy equipment technician:
All
functions in a modern engine are controlled by the ECM
communicating with an elaborate set of sensors measuring
everything from R.P.M. to engine coolant and oil
temperatures and even engine position (i.e. T.D.C.).
Glow plugs are rarely used today on larger engines. The
ECM senses ambient air temperature and retards the
timing of the engine in cold weather so the injector
sprays the fuel at a later time. The air in the cylinder
is compressed more, creating more heat, which aids in
starting.
Smaller engines and engines that
do not have such advanced computer control use glow
plugs to solve the cold-starting problem.
Diesel Fuel
If you have ever compared diesel
fuel and gasoline, you know that they are different.
They certainly smell different. Diesel fuel is heavier
and oilier. Diesel fuel evaporates much more slowly than
gasoline -- its boiling point is actually higher than
the boiling point of water. You will often hear diesel
fuel referred to as "diesel oil" because it is so oily.
Diesel fuel
evaporates more slowly because it is heavier. It
contains more carbon atoms in longer chains than
gasoline does (gasoline is typically C9H20, while
diesel fuel is typically C14H30). It takes
less refining to create diesel fuel, which is why it is
generally cheaper than gasoline.
Diesel fuel
has a higher energy
density than gasoline. On average, 1 gallon
(3.8 L) of diesel fuel contains approximately
155x106 joules
(147,000 BTU), while 1 gallon of gasoline contains
132x106 joules
(125,000 BTU). This, combined with the improved
efficiency of diesel engines, explains why diesel
engines get better mileage than equivalent gasoline
engines.
by
Marshall
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