Title of article :
Thermal efficiency improvement in high output diesel engines a comparison of a Rankine cycle with turbo-compounding
Author/Authors :
W.M.S.R. Weerasinghe، نويسنده , , R.K. Stobart، نويسنده , , S.M. Hounsham، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
4
From page :
2253
To page :
2256
Abstract :
Thermal management, in particular, heat recovery and utilisation in internal combustion engines result in improved fuel economy, reduced emissions, fast warm up and optimized cylinder head temperatures. turbo-compounding is a heat recovery technique that has been successfully used in medium and large scale engines. Heat recovery to a secondary fluid and expansion is used in large scale engines, such as in power plants in the form of heat recovery steam generators (HRSG) . The present paper presents a thermodynamic analysis of turbo-compounding and heat recovery and utilisation through a fluid power cycle, a technique that is also applicable to medium and small scale engines. In a fluid power cycle, the working fluid is stored in a reservoir and expanded subsequently. The reservoir acts as an energy buffer that improves the overall efficiency, significantly. This paper highlights the relative advantage of exhaust heat secondary power cycles over turbo-compounding with the aid of MATLAB based QSS Toolbox simulation results. Steam has been selected as the working fluid in this work for its superior heat capacity over organic fluids and gases.
Keywords :
Rankine cycle , Turbo-compounding , Energy efficiency , Thermal management , Exhaust gas heat recovery , Internal combustion engines
Journal title :
Applied Thermal Engineering
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Applied Thermal Engineering
Record number :
1045287
Link To Document :
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