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Diesel / Brayton Cycles
ASEN 3113
Diesel Cycle
• Invented by Rudolf
Christian Karl Diesel
in 1893
• First engine was
powered by powdered
coal
• Achieved a
compression ratio of
almost 80
• Exploded, almost killed
Diesel
• First working engine
completed 1894 -
generated 13 hp
Diesel Engine
• Also known as
Compression
Ignition Engine
(CI)
• Can this engine
“knock”?
• Difference from
Otto Cycle?
Thermodynamic Cycles for CI engines
• In early CI engines the fuel was injected when the piston reached TDC
and thus combustion lasted well into the expansion stroke.
• In modern engines the fuel is injected before TDC (about 15o
)
• The combustion process in the early CI engines is best approximated by
a constant pressure heat addition process  Diesel Cycle
• The combustion process in the modern CI engines is best approximated
by a combination of constant volume and constant pressure  Dual Cycle
Fuel injection starts
Fuel injection starts
Early CI engine Modern CI engine
Early CI Engine Cycle and the Thermodynamic Diesel Cycle
A
I
R
Combustion
Products
Fuel injected
at TC
Intake
Stroke
Air
Air
BC
Compression
Stroke
Power
Stroke
Exhaust
Stroke
Qin Qout
Compression
Process
Const pressure
heat addition
Process
Expansion
Process
Const volume
heat rejection
Process
Actual
Cycle
Diesel
Cycle
Process a b
Isentropic
compression
Process b  c
Constant pressure
heat addition
Process c  d
Isentropic
expansion
Process d  a
Constant volume
heat rejection
- a=1,b=2,etc…for
book
Air-Standard Diesel cycle
rc =
vc
vb
=
v3
v2
(BOOK)
Cut-off ratio:
( )
m
VVP
m
Q
uu in 232
23 )()(
−
−+=−
AIR
23 Constant Pressure Heat Addition
now involves heat and work
)()( 222333 vPuvPu
m
Qin
+−+=
)()( 2323 TTchh
m
Q
p
in
−=−=
cr
v
v
T
T
v
RT
v
RT
P ==→==
2
3
2
3
3
3
2
2
Qin
First Law Analysis of Diesel Cycle
Equations for processes 12, 41 are the same as those presented
for the Otto cycle
)()( 34
m
W
m
Q
uu out
+−=−
AIR
3  4 Isentropic Expansion
)()( 4343 TTcuu
m
W
v
out
−=−=
note v4
=v1
so
cr
r
v
v
v
v
v
v
v
v
v
v
=⋅=⋅=
3
2
2
1
3
2
2
4
3
4
r
r
T
T
P
P
T
vP
T
vP c
⋅=→=
3
4
3
4
3
33
4
44
11
4
3
3
4
−−






=





=
κ
χ
κ
ρ
ρ
ϖ
ϖ
Τ
Τ
23
1411
hh
uu
mQ
mQ
in
out
cycle
Diesel
−
−
−=−=η
ηDiesel
const cV
=1−
1
rk−1
1
k
⋅
rc
k
−1( )
rc −1( )
⎡
⎣
⎢
⎢
⎤
⎦
⎥
⎥
For cold air-standard the above reduces to:
Thermal Efficiency
1
1
1 −
−= κΟττο
ρ
ηrecall,
Note the term in the square bracket is always larger than one so for the
same compression ratio, r, the Diesel cycle has a lower thermal efficiency
than the Otto cycle
So why is a Diesel engine usually more efficient?
Typical CI Engines
15 < r < 20
When rc (= v3/v2)1 the Diesel cycle efficiency approaches the
efficiency of the Otto cycle
Thermal Efficiency
Higher efficiency is obtained by adding less heat per cycle, Qin,
 run engine at higher speed to get the same power.
k = 1.3
k = 1.3
The cut-off ratio is not a natural choice for the independent variable
a more suitable parameter is the heat input, the two are related by:
1
11
11
1 −




−
−= κ
ιν
χ
ρςΠ
Θ
κ
κ
ρ as Qin 0, rc1
MEP =
Wnet
Vmax −Vmin
- compares performance
of engines of the same
size
Modern CI Engine Cycle and the Thermodynamic Dual Cycle
A
I
R
Combustion
Products
Fuel injected
at 15o
before
TDC
Intake
Stroke
Air
Air
TC
BC
Compression
Stroke
Power
Stroke
Exhaust
Stroke
Qin Qout
Compression
Process
Const pressure
heat addition
Process
Expansion
Process
Const volume
heat rejection
Process
Actual
Cycle
Dual
Cycle
Qin
Const volume
heat addition
Process
Process 1  2 Isentropic compression
Process 2  2.5 Constant volume heat addition
Process 2.5  3 Constant pressure heat addition
Process 3  4 Isentropic expansion
Process 4  1 Constant volume heat rejection
Dual Cycle
Qin
Qin
Qout
1
1
2
2
2.5
2.5
3
3
4
4
)()()()( 5.2325.25.2325.2 TTcTTchhuu
m
Q
pv
in
−+−=−+−=
Thermal Efficiency
)()(
11
5.2325.2
14
hhuu
uu
mQ
mQ
in
out
cycle
Dual
−+−
−
−=−=η
( )





−+−
−
−= −
1)1(
11
1 1
c
k
c
k
cconst
Dual
rk
r
rv αα
α
η
1
1
1 −
−= κΟττο
ρ
η
( )
( )





−
−
⋅−= −
1
111
1 1
c
k
c
k
const c
Diesel
r
r
krV
η
Note, the Otto cycle (rc=1) and the Diesel cycle (α=1) are special cases:
2
3
5.2
3 andwhere
P
P
v
v
rc == α
The use of the Dual cycle requires information about either:
i) the fractions of constant volume and constant pressure heat addition
(common assumption is to equally split the heat addition), or
ii) maximum pressure P3.
Transformation of rc and α into more natural variables yields






−
−
−




−
−= − 1
111
1 1
11 krVP
Q
k
k
r k
in
c
α
α
1
31
P
P
rk
=α
For the same initial conditions P1, V1 and the same compression ratio:
DieselDualOtto ηηη >>
For the same initial conditions P1, V1 and the same peak pressure P3
(actual design limitation in engines):
ottoDualDiesel ηηη >>
Brayton Cycle
• Introduced by George
Brayton (an
American) in 1872
• Used separate
expansion and
compression cylinder
• Constant Combustion
process
18
Brayton Cycle
Other applications of Brayton
cycle
• Power generation - use gas turbines to
generate electricity…very efficient
• Marine applications in large ships
• Automobile racing - late 1960s Indy 500
STP sponsored cars
Schematic of simple cycle
Idealized Brayton Cycle
22
Brayton Cycle
•1 to 2--isentropic
compression
•2 to 3--constant pressure
heat addition (replaces
combustion process)
•3 to 4--isentropic
expansion in the turbine
•4 to 1--constant pressure
heat rejection to return air
to original state
Brayton cycle analysis
in
net
q
w
=η
compturbnet www −=
Efficiency:
Net work:
• Because the Brayton cycle operates between two constant
pressure lines, or isobars, the pressure ratio is important.
•The pressure ratio is not a compression ratio.
24
wcomp = h2 −h1
1 to 2 (isentropic compression in
compressor), apply first law
**When analyzing the cycle, we know that the
compressor work is in (negative). It is
standard convention to just drop the negative
sign and deal with it later:
Brayton cycle analysis
25
2323in hhqq −==
2 to 3 (constant pressure heat addition -
treated as a heat exchanger)
Brayton cycle analysis
or,hhw 34turb −=−
43turb hhw −=
3 to 4 (isentropic expansion in turbine)
26
,hhq 41out −=
14out hhq −=
4 to 1 (constant pressure heat rejection)
We know this is heat transfer out of the
system and therefore negative. In book,
they’ll give it a positive sign and then
subtract it when necessary.
Brayton cycle analysis
Brayton cycle analysis
Substituting:
compturbnet www −=
net work:
)h(h)h(hw 1243net −−−=
Thermal efficiency:
Brayton cycle analysis
in
net
q
w
=η
)h(h
)h(h)h(h
23
1243
−
−−−
=
)h(h
)h(h
1
23
14
−
−
−=η
Brayton cycle analysis
assume cold air conditions and manipulate
the efficiency expression:
)T(Tc
)T(Tc
1
23p
14p
−
−
−=η
( )
( )1TT
1TT
T
T
1
23
14
2
1
−
−
−=η
30
T
T
p
p
k
k
2
1
2
1
1
=






−
;
T
T
p
p
p
p
k
k
k
k
4
3
4
3
1
1
2
1
=





 =






− −
Using the isentropic relationships,
Define:
4
3
1
2
p
P
P
P
P
ratiopressurer ===
Brayton cycle analysis
( )
4
3k1k
p
1
2
T
T
r
T
T
== −
Brayton cycle analysis
Then we can relate the temperature ratios to
the pressure ratio:
Plug back into the efficiency
expression and simplify:
( ) k1k
pr
1
1 −
−=η
32
Brayton cycle analysis
Brayton cycle analysis
An important quantity for Brayton cycles is
the Back Work Ratio (BWR).
turb
comp
w
w
BWR =
The Back-Work Ratio is the Fraction
of Turbine Work Used to Drive the
Compressor
EXAMPLE PROBLEM
The pressure ratio of an air standard Brayton
cycle is 4.5 and the inlet conditions to the
compressor are 100 kPa and 27°C. The
turbine is limited to a temperature of 827°C
and mass flow is 5 kg/s. Determine
a) the thermal efficiency
b) the net power output in kW
c) the BWR
Assume constant specific heats.
Draw diagram
P
v
1
2 3
4
Start analysis
Let’s get the efficiency:
( ) k1k
pr
1
1 −
−=η
From problem statement, we know rp = 4.5
( ) 349.0
5.4
1
1 4.114.1
=−= −
η
Net power output:
Substituting for work terms:
˙Wnet = ˙mwnet = ˙m wturb − wcomp( )
Net Power:
˙Wnet = ˙m (h3 −h4 )− (h2 −h1)( )
˙Wnet = ˙mcp (T3 −T4 )− (T2 −T1)( )
Applying constant specific heats:
Need to get T2 and T4
Use isentropic relationships:
T
T
p
p
k
k
2
1
2
1
1
=






−
;
k
1k
3
4
3
4
p
p
T
T
−






=
T1 and T3 are known along with the
pressure ratios:
( ) K4614.5300T
1.40.4
2 ==T2:
T4: ( ) K7.7150.2221100T
1.40.4
4 ==
Net power is then: kW1120Wnet =&
˙Wnet = ˙mcp (T3 −T4 )− (T2 −T1)( )
Back Work Ratio
43
12
turb
comp
hh
hh
w
w
BWR
−
−
==
Applying constant specific heats:
42.0
7.7151100
300461
TT
TT
BWR
43
12
=
−
−
=
−
−
=
Brayton Cycle
• In theory, as the pressure ratio goes up,
the efficiency rises. The limiting factor is
frequently the turbine inlet
temperature.
• The turbine inlet temp is restricted to
about 1,700 K or 2,600 F.
• Consider a fixed turbine inlet temp., T3
Brayton Cycle
• Irreversibilities
– Compressor and turbine frictional effects -
cause increase in entropy
– Also friction causes pressure drops through
heat exchangers
– Stray heat transfers in components
– Increase in entropy has most significance
• wc = h2 – h1 for the ideal cycle, which was
isentropic
• wt = h3 – h4 for the ideal isentropic cycle
Brayton Cycle
• In order to deal with irreversibilities, we
need to write the values of h2 and h4 as h2,s
and h4,s.
• Then
s,43
act,43
s,t
a,t
t
hh
hh
w
w
−
−
==η
act,21
s,21
a,c
s,c
c
hh
hh
w
w
−
−
==η

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Diesel and Brayton Cycles Comparison

  • 1. Diesel / Brayton Cycles ASEN 3113
  • 2. Diesel Cycle • Invented by Rudolf Christian Karl Diesel in 1893 • First engine was powered by powdered coal • Achieved a compression ratio of almost 80 • Exploded, almost killed Diesel • First working engine completed 1894 - generated 13 hp
  • 3. Diesel Engine • Also known as Compression Ignition Engine (CI) • Can this engine “knock”? • Difference from Otto Cycle?
  • 4. Thermodynamic Cycles for CI engines • In early CI engines the fuel was injected when the piston reached TDC and thus combustion lasted well into the expansion stroke. • In modern engines the fuel is injected before TDC (about 15o ) • The combustion process in the early CI engines is best approximated by a constant pressure heat addition process  Diesel Cycle • The combustion process in the modern CI engines is best approximated by a combination of constant volume and constant pressure  Dual Cycle Fuel injection starts Fuel injection starts Early CI engine Modern CI engine
  • 5. Early CI Engine Cycle and the Thermodynamic Diesel Cycle A I R Combustion Products Fuel injected at TC Intake Stroke Air Air BC Compression Stroke Power Stroke Exhaust Stroke Qin Qout Compression Process Const pressure heat addition Process Expansion Process Const volume heat rejection Process Actual Cycle Diesel Cycle
  • 6. Process a b Isentropic compression Process b  c Constant pressure heat addition Process c  d Isentropic expansion Process d  a Constant volume heat rejection - a=1,b=2,etc…for book Air-Standard Diesel cycle rc = vc vb = v3 v2 (BOOK) Cut-off ratio:
  • 7. ( ) m VVP m Q uu in 232 23 )()( − −+=− AIR 23 Constant Pressure Heat Addition now involves heat and work )()( 222333 vPuvPu m Qin +−+= )()( 2323 TTchh m Q p in −=−= cr v v T T v RT v RT P ==→== 2 3 2 3 3 3 2 2 Qin First Law Analysis of Diesel Cycle Equations for processes 12, 41 are the same as those presented for the Otto cycle
  • 8. )()( 34 m W m Q uu out +−=− AIR 3  4 Isentropic Expansion )()( 4343 TTcuu m W v out −=−= note v4 =v1 so cr r v v v v v v v v v v =⋅=⋅= 3 2 2 1 3 2 2 4 3 4 r r T T P P T vP T vP c ⋅=→= 3 4 3 4 3 33 4 44 11 4 3 3 4 −−       =      = κ χ κ ρ ρ ϖ ϖ Τ Τ
  • 9. 23 1411 hh uu mQ mQ in out cycle Diesel − − −=−=η ηDiesel const cV =1− 1 rk−1 1 k ⋅ rc k −1( ) rc −1( ) ⎡ ⎣ ⎢ ⎢ ⎤ ⎦ ⎥ ⎥ For cold air-standard the above reduces to: Thermal Efficiency 1 1 1 − −= κΟττο ρ ηrecall, Note the term in the square bracket is always larger than one so for the same compression ratio, r, the Diesel cycle has a lower thermal efficiency than the Otto cycle So why is a Diesel engine usually more efficient?
  • 10. Typical CI Engines 15 < r < 20 When rc (= v3/v2)1 the Diesel cycle efficiency approaches the efficiency of the Otto cycle Thermal Efficiency Higher efficiency is obtained by adding less heat per cycle, Qin,  run engine at higher speed to get the same power.
  • 11. k = 1.3 k = 1.3 The cut-off ratio is not a natural choice for the independent variable a more suitable parameter is the heat input, the two are related by: 1 11 11 1 −     − −= κ ιν χ ρςΠ Θ κ κ ρ as Qin 0, rc1 MEP = Wnet Vmax −Vmin - compares performance of engines of the same size
  • 12. Modern CI Engine Cycle and the Thermodynamic Dual Cycle A I R Combustion Products Fuel injected at 15o before TDC Intake Stroke Air Air TC BC Compression Stroke Power Stroke Exhaust Stroke Qin Qout Compression Process Const pressure heat addition Process Expansion Process Const volume heat rejection Process Actual Cycle Dual Cycle Qin Const volume heat addition Process
  • 13. Process 1  2 Isentropic compression Process 2  2.5 Constant volume heat addition Process 2.5  3 Constant pressure heat addition Process 3  4 Isentropic expansion Process 4  1 Constant volume heat rejection Dual Cycle Qin Qin Qout 1 1 2 2 2.5 2.5 3 3 4 4 )()()()( 5.2325.25.2325.2 TTcTTchhuu m Q pv in −+−=−+−=
  • 14. Thermal Efficiency )()( 11 5.2325.2 14 hhuu uu mQ mQ in out cycle Dual −+− − −=−=η ( )      −+− − −= − 1)1( 11 1 1 c k c k cconst Dual rk r rv αα α η 1 1 1 − −= κΟττο ρ η ( ) ( )      − − ⋅−= − 1 111 1 1 c k c k const c Diesel r r krV η Note, the Otto cycle (rc=1) and the Diesel cycle (α=1) are special cases: 2 3 5.2 3 andwhere P P v v rc == α
  • 15. The use of the Dual cycle requires information about either: i) the fractions of constant volume and constant pressure heat addition (common assumption is to equally split the heat addition), or ii) maximum pressure P3. Transformation of rc and α into more natural variables yields       − − −     − −= − 1 111 1 1 11 krVP Q k k r k in c α α 1 31 P P rk =α For the same initial conditions P1, V1 and the same compression ratio: DieselDualOtto ηηη >> For the same initial conditions P1, V1 and the same peak pressure P3 (actual design limitation in engines): ottoDualDiesel ηηη >>
  • 16.
  • 17. Brayton Cycle • Introduced by George Brayton (an American) in 1872 • Used separate expansion and compression cylinder • Constant Combustion process
  • 19. Other applications of Brayton cycle • Power generation - use gas turbines to generate electricity…very efficient • Marine applications in large ships • Automobile racing - late 1960s Indy 500 STP sponsored cars
  • 22. 22 Brayton Cycle •1 to 2--isentropic compression •2 to 3--constant pressure heat addition (replaces combustion process) •3 to 4--isentropic expansion in the turbine •4 to 1--constant pressure heat rejection to return air to original state
  • 23. Brayton cycle analysis in net q w =η compturbnet www −= Efficiency: Net work: • Because the Brayton cycle operates between two constant pressure lines, or isobars, the pressure ratio is important. •The pressure ratio is not a compression ratio.
  • 24. 24 wcomp = h2 −h1 1 to 2 (isentropic compression in compressor), apply first law **When analyzing the cycle, we know that the compressor work is in (negative). It is standard convention to just drop the negative sign and deal with it later: Brayton cycle analysis
  • 25. 25 2323in hhqq −== 2 to 3 (constant pressure heat addition - treated as a heat exchanger) Brayton cycle analysis or,hhw 34turb −=− 43turb hhw −= 3 to 4 (isentropic expansion in turbine)
  • 26. 26 ,hhq 41out −= 14out hhq −= 4 to 1 (constant pressure heat rejection) We know this is heat transfer out of the system and therefore negative. In book, they’ll give it a positive sign and then subtract it when necessary. Brayton cycle analysis
  • 27. Brayton cycle analysis Substituting: compturbnet www −= net work: )h(h)h(hw 1243net −−−=
  • 28. Thermal efficiency: Brayton cycle analysis in net q w =η )h(h )h(h)h(h 23 1243 − −−− = )h(h )h(h 1 23 14 − − −=η
  • 29. Brayton cycle analysis assume cold air conditions and manipulate the efficiency expression: )T(Tc )T(Tc 1 23p 14p − − −=η ( ) ( )1TT 1TT T T 1 23 14 2 1 − − −=η
  • 31. ( ) 4 3k1k p 1 2 T T r T T == − Brayton cycle analysis Then we can relate the temperature ratios to the pressure ratio: Plug back into the efficiency expression and simplify: ( ) k1k pr 1 1 − −=η
  • 33. Brayton cycle analysis An important quantity for Brayton cycles is the Back Work Ratio (BWR). turb comp w w BWR =
  • 34. The Back-Work Ratio is the Fraction of Turbine Work Used to Drive the Compressor
  • 35. EXAMPLE PROBLEM The pressure ratio of an air standard Brayton cycle is 4.5 and the inlet conditions to the compressor are 100 kPa and 27°C. The turbine is limited to a temperature of 827°C and mass flow is 5 kg/s. Determine a) the thermal efficiency b) the net power output in kW c) the BWR Assume constant specific heats.
  • 37. Start analysis Let’s get the efficiency: ( ) k1k pr 1 1 − −=η From problem statement, we know rp = 4.5 ( ) 349.0 5.4 1 1 4.114.1 =−= − η
  • 38. Net power output: Substituting for work terms: ˙Wnet = ˙mwnet = ˙m wturb − wcomp( ) Net Power: ˙Wnet = ˙m (h3 −h4 )− (h2 −h1)( ) ˙Wnet = ˙mcp (T3 −T4 )− (T2 −T1)( ) Applying constant specific heats:
  • 39. Need to get T2 and T4 Use isentropic relationships: T T p p k k 2 1 2 1 1 =       − ; k 1k 3 4 3 4 p p T T −       = T1 and T3 are known along with the pressure ratios: ( ) K4614.5300T 1.40.4 2 ==T2: T4: ( ) K7.7150.2221100T 1.40.4 4 == Net power is then: kW1120Wnet =& ˙Wnet = ˙mcp (T3 −T4 )− (T2 −T1)( )
  • 40. Back Work Ratio 43 12 turb comp hh hh w w BWR − − == Applying constant specific heats: 42.0 7.7151100 300461 TT TT BWR 43 12 = − − = − − =
  • 41. Brayton Cycle • In theory, as the pressure ratio goes up, the efficiency rises. The limiting factor is frequently the turbine inlet temperature. • The turbine inlet temp is restricted to about 1,700 K or 2,600 F. • Consider a fixed turbine inlet temp., T3
  • 42. Brayton Cycle • Irreversibilities – Compressor and turbine frictional effects - cause increase in entropy – Also friction causes pressure drops through heat exchangers – Stray heat transfers in components – Increase in entropy has most significance • wc = h2 – h1 for the ideal cycle, which was isentropic • wt = h3 – h4 for the ideal isentropic cycle
  • 43. Brayton Cycle • In order to deal with irreversibilities, we need to write the values of h2 and h4 as h2,s and h4,s. • Then s,43 act,43 s,t a,t t hh hh w w − − ==η act,21 s,21 a,c s,c c hh hh w w − − ==η