obanion
Automotive
- Jan 1, 2004
- 101
I'm creating this thread to discuss this one particular effect of water injection. Lots of attention is payed to intake charge cooling, and I understand that very well. But of particular interest to me is the effect water injection has on the relationship between BMEP (brake mean effective pressure, or the average pressure pushing on the piston, and therefore torque), and peak pressure.
The study done in the early 30s by Sir Harry Ricardo, gave us a nice graph, which is on page 134 of the book "Turbochargers" in the WI section. The gist of it is that BMEP kept going up, and at one point, the peak pressures starting coming down, even as BMEP kept going up. Translation: More power with a lower maximum stress on parts, ie, more power before breaking a rod or lifting a head, etc. Unfortunately, the study was only able to go so far. Not as much water as I'd like to try and run was used.
So my first question is....why? How does water (or steam) during combustion somehow reduce peak pressure, and increase BMEP? My guess is it's a combination of combustion effects, slowing combustion so it's more "spead out" over the power stroke, and also the actual thermodynamic behavior of steam vs air, with more steam translating into a better medium for transfering power to the piston.
Am I warm?
Secondly, do the advantages keep going up, the more water you use? Before you yell NO, the example I am considering is where you have lots of intake heat from lots of boost (45-55psi), so you can introduce FAR more water into the cylinder as it will be vaporized into water vapor, rather than liquid. My calculations indicate a air charge of about 140F at maximum humidity, which is about a 10:1 air:water mass ratio. I'd be displacing about 8% of the air with water vapor at that point.
The alternate is to add a bunch of weight and complexity with dual liquid/air intercoolers, and not have all that water in the intake charge. Yes the charge should make more power, not having all the water vapor displacement, but I have the option of running lots more boost anyway (65psi, no problem on compounded turbos), so maximum power at a given boost level isn't my goal. Rather it's the maximum power for the rotating assembly, which is limited by peak cylinder pressues.
So, anyone have any idea what BMEP and peak pressures are like using very high (but vaporizied) water:air ratios?
The study done in the early 30s by Sir Harry Ricardo, gave us a nice graph, which is on page 134 of the book "Turbochargers" in the WI section. The gist of it is that BMEP kept going up, and at one point, the peak pressures starting coming down, even as BMEP kept going up. Translation: More power with a lower maximum stress on parts, ie, more power before breaking a rod or lifting a head, etc. Unfortunately, the study was only able to go so far. Not as much water as I'd like to try and run was used.
So my first question is....why? How does water (or steam) during combustion somehow reduce peak pressure, and increase BMEP? My guess is it's a combination of combustion effects, slowing combustion so it's more "spead out" over the power stroke, and also the actual thermodynamic behavior of steam vs air, with more steam translating into a better medium for transfering power to the piston.
Am I warm?
Secondly, do the advantages keep going up, the more water you use? Before you yell NO, the example I am considering is where you have lots of intake heat from lots of boost (45-55psi), so you can introduce FAR more water into the cylinder as it will be vaporized into water vapor, rather than liquid. My calculations indicate a air charge of about 140F at maximum humidity, which is about a 10:1 air:water mass ratio. I'd be displacing about 8% of the air with water vapor at that point.
The alternate is to add a bunch of weight and complexity with dual liquid/air intercoolers, and not have all that water in the intake charge. Yes the charge should make more power, not having all the water vapor displacement, but I have the option of running lots more boost anyway (65psi, no problem on compounded turbos), so maximum power at a given boost level isn't my goal. Rather it's the maximum power for the rotating assembly, which is limited by peak cylinder pressues.
So, anyone have any idea what BMEP and peak pressures are like using very high (but vaporizied) water:air ratios?