Students in the Mechanical Engineering class of May 2017 being taught how to reassemble an motor vehicle engine.
STUDENTS LEARN ABOUT INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE & GAS
TURBINES Module –
INTRODUCTION HEAT ENGINE:
A heat engine is a
device which transforms the chemical energy of a fuel into thermal energy and
uses this energy to produce mechanical work.
It is classified into
two types-
(a) External
combustion engine
(b) Internal
combustion engine External combustion engine:
In this engine, the products of combustion of air and fuel
transfer heat to a second fluid which is the working fluid of the cycle.
Examples:
In the steam engine or a steam turbine plant, the heat of
combustion is employed to generate steam which is used in a piston engine
(reciprocating type engine) or a turbine (rotary type engine) for useful work.
In a closed cycle gas turbine, the heat of combustion in an
external furnace is transferred to gas, usually air which the working fluid of
the cycle.
Internal combustion engine:
In this engine, the combustion of air and fuels take place
inside the cylinder and are used as the direct motive force. It can be
classified into the following types:
1. According to the basic engine design- (a) Reciprocating
engine (Use of cylinder piston arrangement), (b) Rotary engine (Use of turbine)
2. According to the type of fuel used- (a) Petrol engine,
(b) diesel engine, (c) gas engine (CNG, LPG), (d) Alcohol engine (ethanol,
methanol etc)
3. According to the number of strokes per cycle-
(a) Four stroke and
(b) Two stroke engines
4. According to the method of igniting the fuel- (a) Spark
ignition engine, (b) compression ignition engine and (c) hot spot ignition
engine
5. According to the working cycle- (a) Otto cycle (constant
volume cycle) engine, (b) diesel cycle (constant pressure cycle) engine, (c)
dual combustion cycle (semi diesel cycle) engine.
6. According to the fuel supply and mixture preparation- (a)
Carburetted type (fuel supplied through the carburettor), (b) Injection type
(fuel injected into inlet ports or inlet manifold, fuel injected into the cylinder
just before ignition).
7. According to the number of cylinder- (a) Single cylinder
and (b) multi-cylinder engine
8. Method of cooling- water cooled or air cooled 9. Speed of
the engine- Slow speed, medium speed and high-speed engine
10. Cylinder Arrangement-Vertical, horizontal, inline,
V-type, radial, opposed cylinder or piston engines.
11. Valve or port design and location- Overhead (I head),
side valve (L head); in two stroke engines: cross scavenging, loop scavenging,
uniflow scavenging.
12. Method governing- Hit and miss governed engines,
quantitatively governed engines and qualitatively governed engine
14. Application- Automotive engines for land transport,
marine engines for propulsion of ships, aircraft engines for aircraft
propulsion, industrial engines, prime movers for electrical generators.