Split cycle engine

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Belatti
Belatti
33
Joined: 10 Jul 2007, 21:48
Location: Argentina

Split cycle engine

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A new promising engine design... and counting...

http://www.motorauthority.com/news/indu ... #more-5515

Would appreciate if someone knows more technical features from this engine than the ones mentioned in this article.
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Conceptual
Conceptual
0
Joined: 15 Nov 2007, 03:33

Re: Split cycle engine

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Belatti wrote:A new promising engine design... and counting...

http://www.motorauthority.com/news/indu ... #more-5515

Would appreciate if someone knows more technical features from this engine than the ones mentioned in this article.
Very interesting!

Chris

Carlos
Carlos
11
Joined: 02 Sep 2006, 19:43
Location: Canada

Re: Split cycle engine

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Split Engine description and pix from our friends at Symscape
http://www.symscape.com/blog/split_cycle_engine
How it works form the company Scuderi Air Hybrid Engine
http://www.scuderigroup.com/technology/ ... works.html
A Video Descpription
http://www.scuderigroup.com/technology/ ... works.html
I think of it as a modular 2 cylinder 2 stroke with one cylinder compressing the mixture for the second cylinder. That's a simplification of course. I like simple.

We have a thread going on alternative engine design, maybe this should be there.

fastback33
fastback33
0
Joined: 29 Aug 2007, 08:45

Re: Split cycle engine

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Ahem, Ford, GM, Chrysler, pay attention your savior has arrived, now all you need is a couple good designers.

Conceptual
Conceptual
0
Joined: 15 Nov 2007, 03:33

Re: Split cycle engine

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Wow.

Aren't the current V8's capable of running on 4 cylinders now? (Start of Q3 last year)? This would only require a new crankshaft and some head porting to work even under current restrictions?

It almost makes you wonder how much added compression there is when the exhaust valve opens pre-spark in the current engines.

Interesting none the less.

Chris

riff_raff
riff_raff
132
Joined: 24 Dec 2004, 10:18

Re: Split cycle engine

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The Scuderi design is essentially an external combustion engine. While it sounds attractive in principle, in practice it is not all that great. The problem with designs like this is that they tend to have very high heat transfer and pumping losses, due to the fact that it has to transfer the high pressure working fluid from one cylinder to another. Unfortunately this cannot be done without loss of pressure (blowdown), which also means loss of available work that can be extracted from the working fluid. Also, passing a hot gas through a cool metal duct at high velocities, makes for very high rates of heat transfer. And heat loss is bad for efficiency.

The Scuderi concept is nothing new. It's long been known that the best and most efficient way to extract work from a high temperature, high pressure combustion process is to perform the intake, compression, combustion and expansion functions all within the same tightly sealed, minimum surface area volume (ie. an open-chamber, recip piston engine). The most efficient and cost effective engines are still the big, slow turning, 2-stroke CI engines used on large ships:

http://people.bath.ac.uk/ccsshb/12cyl/
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