Can a Computerized System Improve Performance of Miniature Steam Locomotives?

  • Thread starter Thread starter joanlluch
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Locomotive Steam
AI Thread Summary
The discussion explores the potential for integrating computerized systems into miniature steam locomotives to enhance steam distribution efficiency. The idea involves replacing traditional valve mechanisms with solenoid valves controlled by a PLC or Arduino, aiming to optimize steam flow based on real-time parameters like torque and speed. While some participants express skepticism about the feasibility and efficiency gains compared to diesel engines, others highlight the hobbyist aspect and the enjoyment of experimenting with technology. The conversation also touches on existing limitations in design and regulations that hinder innovation in miniature steam locomotives. Overall, the project is seen as a fun and interesting challenge, with the possibility of modest efficiency improvements through modern control systems.
joanlluch
Messages
11
Reaction score
0
Hi, I wonder if someone has experience on steam engines or locomotives, even miniature ones.

Some time ago I had the thought of applying a computerised system to miniature steam locomotive. The idea is to remove the traditional mechanism that drives the steam distribution valves (that's known as Walschaerts or Stephenson distribution) , and replace all that by a system consisting of solenoid valves -possibly steam driven- that would be controlled by a PLC or an Arduino. The idea is to figure out a set of "distribution maps" that would optimise the steam distribution to the engine cylinders -both intake and outtake flows- at all times based on required torque, current speed, available steam pressure and so on.

I do not know of anybody who has attempted this before, so any thoughts on whether this may have sense, would be useful.

Thanks.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
joanlluch said:
available steam pressure and so on
You're probably wasting your time. You'll be trying to balance boiler feed rate, firing, and water level with a control system to "optimize" century old technology that might have been 15% efficient when new.
 
Hi bystander, what you suggest is obviously true, but that's not the point.

I build working miniature steam locomotives as a hobby, not because they are efficient or up to date, but because I like them. There is a number of people that does it for the same reason.

Said that, I am not referring to boiler optimisation as this is already very common on industrial boilers. I was particularly targeting real time steam distribution to the engine cylinders. Think on dynamically variable admission and exhaust.

My question is still relevant because: (1) I regard it as a hobby, so I do this just for fun (2) full size steam locomotives are still in operation for tourist rail tours, and new main line steam locomotives have been built as late as 2008 in the UK for that exclusive use, which keeps a great demand. (3) I would be surprised if nobody has attempted or thought on that before, which is why I asked.
 
As discussed on another forum the conventional steam locomotive in it's simple form probably achieved most of what was possible and to achieve even a little more requires added complexity and considerable additional cost .

The steam engine is always hampered by simple thermodynamic limits - at any conventional pressure and steam temperature efficiency is always going to be low . With a coal fired engine in older times efficiency did not matter too much - there was plenty of coal and it was cheap .

In modern times a steam locomotive would sensibly have to be oil fired and more efficient . Given oil firing it really makes more sense to use a diesel engine and burn the oil directly .

So question is could a blank paper design steam engine ever be designed to compete with a diesel engine . Theoretically yes - but engine would not look anything like Flying Scotsman .

A quasi closed cycle engine running at high pressure and temperature and packaged like a diesel engine could potentially be very efficient indeed and a computerised engine control and management system would be a worth while part of the overall design .

Probably best to abandon traditional ideas about piston steam engines altogether and base any new designs on turbomachinery .

With all electric transmission and catenary collection option fitted as standard a very effective and relatively simpe go anywhere locomotive might be possible .

Problem is though that no one is going to want to go in this direction for a new locomotive design . Diesel and catenary electric trains have already been firmly settled on as the best machines for working UK mainline railways
 
joanlluch said:
miniature steam locomotives as a hobby
Equal miniature boilers, equal large upsets in boiler pressure, and what I would anticipate to be a real headache keeping dry steam in lines and valves. As you say, "It's a hobby." Let us know how it works out.
 
You never know, maybe with computerisation of some parts you might get up to double the fuel efficiency of a standard steam engine.
Though it would probably still be less efficient than say a diesel, or a gas turbine using an equivalent amount of fuel.
 
Bystander said:
Equal miniature boilers, equal large upsets in boiler pressure, and what I would anticipate to be a real headache keeping dry steam in lines and valves. As you say, "It's a hobby." Let us know how it works out.

Hi Bystander. I get the impression that you overestimate the difficulty of it. You can believe that miniature steam locos are actually made and they work !. Search for "miniature steam locomotive" in google images and you will see. As in full size practice, steam superheaters are used to keep steam dry.
 
Hi Nidum and rootone.

Well, I doubt any new design of a steam engine could ever reach the overall efficiency of a diesel engine, much less that of an internal combustion gas turbine. To my knowledge, steam turbine based power plants which run 24 hour a day 365 days a year are not either able to achieve the efficiency of a diesel. So to me the superiority of diesels is not under question, and was not at all the purpose of my original question.

In the efficiency range of a -classic- steam engine it is known that the higher the steam pressure and the larger the expansion rate of steam in the cylinders the better the efficiency. To maximise engine efficiency (leaving boiler efficiency at one side for now), a steam locomotive should be operated at full open regulator, and the shorter possible steam cut-off, which will still provide the required power. The higher the boiler pressure the shorter cut-offs must be achieved for max efficiency. This makes me think that a system that (1) would fully and sharply open the steam intake at the beginning of the piston stroke, that (2) would completely and quickly shut it down at a predetermined precise cut-off point, that (3) would keep the exhaust fully open during the full piston exhaust stroke, should behave better -and be more controllable- than the traditionally mechanically driven distribution valves. Now whether this potentially would increase efficiency up to an additional 1% or a 5% or none at all, is what remains to be seen :-)
 
Designing electronic control systems for a miniature steam locomotive would certainly be an interesting exercise .

Need to start further back in the overall design procedure first though . Most model size engines use steam at 100 psi or so and moderate superheat . Trouble is this steam seldom gets utilised effectively . Tests and calculations show that MEP in model size cylinders is abysmally low ~ 30 psi or sometimes even less . To get anything like worthwhile efficiency this figure has to be raised a lot . Origin of problem is that model size cylinders are usually too big in bore . Reducing cylinder bore would immediately raise MEP to more satisfactory levels .

Valve events in both full size and better model designs are actually quite close to ideal as they are . Possibly a better way to go than using electrically actuated valves would be to have a look at electronic engine management but leave the basic valve gear as conventional .

The computerised system now monitors all functions and automatically adjusts settings of valve gear and regulator for best efficiency consistent with effective working of engine in hauling train .
 
  • #10
I am sure it will be a fun hobby project, let us know how it goes.
Next project is to send one of the new fangled devices back a couple of centuries.
Steam powered time travel!, imagine where we might be by now!
(Sry, just joking - do have fun with it.)
 
  • #11
Myself i love the idea.

If you can find a Marks Mechanical Engineer's handbook frm 1920's to 1940's there is an interesting chapter on "Carding" of reciprocating steam engines. Basically that's making a PV diagram by actually recording pressure versus piston position. It's how you optimize a stationary engine.
What fun it would be to watch that real time at various loads and valve timing !
snip of an actual "card"
http://www.oldengine.org/members/diesel/indicator/Indicator1.htm
steamenginecard.jpg


http://trumpetb.net/loco/steampv.html

steamenginecard2.jpg


Check "Florida Flywheelers" antique engine show , February in Zolfo Springs.
 

Attachments

  • steamenginecard2jpg.jpg
    steamenginecard2jpg.jpg
    60.4 KB · Views: 1,279
Last edited:
  • #12
Are these engines all double acting, compound and/or triple reduction engines?
There are plenty of valves to control and optimise there.
Those valves will need to switch high flow and/or high pressure quickly and efficiently.
What type of valves will you use, slide valves, balanced spool valves or diesel common rail type injection valves?
 
  • #13
Union Pacific's steam shop in Cheyenne is open to public one weekend a year, check it out.
A few years back I was stuck in a traffic jam on an overpass there - heard a steam whistle, then a steam locomotive huff-puff, lo and behold (i think it was) a "Big Boy" with a dozen passenger cars roared underneath and sped off to the west... engulfing the overpass in coal smoke.
What a treat !
 
  • #14
Null post
 
  • #15
There's quite a number of people building and running these miniature locomotives. Most of these locos are pretty detailed. Unfortunately, there seems to be in the hobby a strong bias towards model perfection rather than physics or Engineering. I am sure that most in the hobby don't even care about the Engineering aspects of their own locomotives. So the result is that all these locos are pretty standard and similar from the point of view of efficiency and construction. In fact, only a few people bring attention or actually understand anything beyond essential aspects of steam technology.

To make things worse, on most countries there are strict regulations on miniature locomotive boilers, which limit capacity, max pressure, building material and other aspects of them. In many cases this prevent users from deviating from the stablished status quo, and this is yet another reason for lack of innovation.

A significant number of plans for these locomotives exist that you can use to build your own, but all them were drawn by hand before the 80's -most date from the 60's, or 50's or even earlier- and in my opinion these plans are all outdated. Not to mention that some of them contain errors that have never fixed.

So the result is that efficiency on these locos is really poor even for a steam engine, the use of modern materials is virtually inexistent, and no industrial standard parts or procedures are normally used.

My intention is to draw plans of one of such miniature locos with a 3D CAD software in a way that parts could be made in a standard way and easily assembled, where no arbitrary impositions are made on design, and where I can try several things. By this I do imply that my loco will be super-performant or super-efficient, as I also aim for it to look more or less standard, but at least I am in for a fresh approach to what is normally made. I will keep posting ideas, questions and thoughts.
 
  • #16
One of the problems with full size conventional steam locomotives was that it was difficult to adjust the boiler steam generation rate quickly in response to varying demand . Drivers were very skilled and learned to anticipate demand but nevertheless they generally erred on safe side and maintained a high rate of steam generation all the time when running . This was of course not very efficient .

Another aspect was that engines had a lot of preparation time while steam was being raised and also many engines spent a large part of their working time standing idle - especially UK goods trains which could spend half their working time on standby . All this wasted time while in steam again led to poor overall efficiencies .

It's academic now but devising ways to get faster boiler response times and better utilisation of engines during working day would probably have raised overall efficiency considerably .

On model size boilers there is still considerable scope for improvement - but not with coal firing . Gas or oil firing with a boiler purpose designed to use these fuels and with a proper control system should show considerable improvements in performance and utility .
 
  • #17
Hi Nidum,

Indeed, a fast reacting boiler is key to optimise looses due to idle/standby times and non steady operation with varying demand conditions.

I will attempt to use gas (such as butane) for heating the boiler. My idea is that I should be able to completely and immediately shut down gas supply when the loco is idle. As opposed to coal fired locos, gas will stop adding heat as soon as demand ceases, thus allowing for setting the boiler in standby very quickly without wasting combustible energy. Also, when the steam generation demand does suddenly increase, a gas burner is able to instantaneously provide additional heat with no delay.

On standard miniature locomotives, a safety valve is the main device controlling boiler pressure. Every time the valve opens causes waste of water and energy. Ideally, steam pressure should be maintained high at all times, but the safety valve should never open.

In my case, I may enable a closed loop control system that automatically actuates on the gas burner to keep a target constant pressure in the boiler, just below the safety valve setting, but preventing the valve from opening. A gas fired system has minimal heat inertia, so I assume this is possible in such a system. I can imagine that even a simple on-off system should be able to reasonably control the boiler pressure.

Another key aspect I consider is assuring the boiler is fully and perfectly insulated, so that the locomotive gas consumption is reduced to the minimum -near to zero- when the locomotive is in standby, but still ready to deliver full power at any time.
 
  • #18
Oh no. another boring anecdote ..

Didn't coal fired steam locomotives regulate firebox airflow to control the boiler short term ?

A friend of mine, Gordon J, was a young fireman on UP "Big Boys" in Wyoming just after WW2.
He told tales of the engineer hollering at him for not getting coal into the firebox fast enough when approaching an uphill grade.
Exhaust steam vents up the stack through an eductor that pulls air through the firebox, creating a bit of "Feed Forward" control for steam pressure. More steam through the cylinders increases airflow through firebox, and fuel is mostly air after all.

Since demineralizers were not common back then locomotives used local water which limed up their boilers, requiring them to be cooled down and descaled every few weeks.
http://orr.gov.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0017/2636/RSP6-locoblrs.pdf

He also related that when diesels came in in early 50's they lacked the power of "Big Boy" , in fact he rescued some stuck diesel freights with the Big Boy. UP re-routed track around some steep places between Laramie and Cheyenne to accommodate their new diesels..

Diesel replaced steam not because of performance but because it made maintenance less labor intensive.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Pacific_Big_Boy

...zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz... end anecdote...zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz...
 
  • #19
Baluncore said:
What type of valves will you use, slide valves, balanced spool valves or diesel common rail type injection valves?
The efficiency and the ability to control the chosen valves will make or break the project.
 
  • #20
Hi Jim,

Thanks for the links and statements. The first link is an interesting read, btw.

On a full sized locomotive it has little sense to use gas, but I am referring at all time to a miniature loco. If steam locos were to return to the tracks I think that one combustible to be considered should be biomass. Not sure in the US or UK, but in continental Europe there's a significant production of biomass. Most of it is used in power plants, but why not use it directly on locomotives, maybe through gasification reactors?
 
  • #21
Baluncore said:
The efficiency and the ability to control the chosen valves will make or break the project.

I have not looked at that in detail yet, as I am still at earlier stages of my build. I am open to suggestions. It must be a kind of valve that opens/closes reliably and fast and is able to stand superheated steam conditions. My take is that this may have to be designed specifically. One possibility is to use traditional piston valves in the usual way and replace the mechanical gearing by electrically driven solenoids. Better if the valves are steam powered so that the required electrical power is kept to a minimum.
 
  • #22
I think it sounds like a lot of fun. But for me, the fun would be the design and tuning of the control algorithms. I would probably wind up using a simulation of the locomotive, not the physical thing.

You have to decide yourself where you would derive the most pleasure from your project.
 
  • #23
anorlunda said:
I think it sounds like a lot of fun. But for me, the fun would be the design and tuning of the control algorithms. I would probably wind up using a simulation of the locomotive, not the physical thing.

You have to decide yourself where you would derive the most pleasure from your project.
Yes, control loop tuning is a lot of fun, until you have done it for decades. It happens that I have been in the industrial automation field and the development of automatic control software for 20+ years in the chemical industry, and to me this is like bread and butter. Previously, in the early 90's, I have been involved in developing simulation software to find solutions to physical problems. The software used iterative algorithms applied on math models of physical systems to converge to a solution.

Currently, I am half retired and my interest has switched to making actual physical things. A real steam locomotive (in the sense of something touchable and made in metal) is something that appeals me at this time.
 
Last edited:
  • #24
Have a look at how the valves work on locomotive Duke of Goucester . Mechanically driven but probably one of the best ever designs of valves for steam cylinders .
 
  • #25
Caprotti ?

now THAT's something !
youtube.com/watch?v=pIK5mnd_h_U
 
  • Like
Likes Nidum
  • #26
I don't know how big your loco is going to be but I think that one of your big problems is going to be the size of controller and IO that you'll need and the power supply for it. As to steam returning to full size locomotives I very much doubt it, Brunel recognised that it is stupid to carry your engine and fuel around if you can put it trackside, his atmospheric railway was a failure due to limits on available materials, but the idea was sound, these days it's called electrification.
 
  • #27
Jobrag said:
Brunel recognised that it is stupid to carry your engine and fuel around if you can put it trackside,

Big IF there.

IMG_1822_thumb.jpg
 
  • #28
joanlluch said:
I have not looked at that in detail yet, as I am still at earlier stages of my build. I am open to suggestions. It must be a kind of valve that opens/closes reliably and fast and is able to stand superheated steam conditions. My take is that this may have to be designed specifically. One possibility is to use traditional piston valves in the usual way and replace the mechanical gearing by electrically driven solenoids. Better if the valves are steam powered so that the required electrical power is kept to a minimum.
A “computer controlled steam engine” requires a steam generator and a rotary converter driven by steam expansion. It probably should use pistons to look like a “steam engine”.

The mathematics, software, processors and the steam engine mechanisms are all available today. The missing link needed to satisfy the intention expressed in the OP is the valve technology. It is the control of the steam generator, the pressure to rotation converter and their interface that is critical.

Pneumatic valve technology will be the first place to look for valve technology, followed by hydraulic valve design.

The minimum needed to identify the valve requirements is a computer simulation of a parametrically defined double acting compound engine. That simulation will identify the flow rates and valve timing variation required to efficiently optimise control of the thermodynamic cycle.

What is that thermodynamics simulator called ?
Is it available as freeware ?
 
  • #29
Jobrag said:
I don't know how big your loco is going to be but I think that one of your big problems is going to be the size of controller and IO that you'll need and the power supply for it.
Hi Jobrag, The miniature locomotive is big enough to hold a small sized PLC controller including batteries to power it. Also you have the option to fit it all in the "tender". To have an idea of how big such locomotives are you must consider that the track gauge is 127 millimetres (or 5 inches). See these two videos for an example:



.

This one is quite spectacular:

.

The second locomotive is not running very efficiently because it is releasing steam all the time through the safety valve on top of it. The first and third ones release a lot of steam only when they stop at the end of the track, which ideally should be also avoided.

These kind of things are very popular in the UK, but people making them have usually a poor knowledge of physics or steam technology.
 
  • #30
Please attach video to your post rather than embed video in your post. My internet is volume restricted and slow. I cannot follow threads that lock up my slow wireless links. I have unwatched this thread.
 
  • #31
Jim Hardy mentioned the idea of indicator cards. There is a very, very comprehensive book on this subject that has recently been reprinted and is available from Amazon. The title and author are
Twenty Years With the Indicator
by Pray.
It should how a really skilled interpreter could get all manner of information about steam engine operation from studying an indicator card.
 
  • Like
Likes Nidum and jim hardy
  • #32
A useful tool in electronics is the equivalent circuit where complicated devices and complete circuits are described in terms of assemblies of basic components . Things like current and voltage sources and RLC components .

Another tool more generally used in engineering is an equivalent circuit where everything is described in terms of an assembly of connected 'black boxes' each with a transfer function .

Any thoughts as to what the equivalent circuit of a steam locomotive system would look like ??
 
  • #33
Nidum said:
Any thoughts as to what the equivalent circuit of a steam locomotive system would look like ??

i think it'd be the processes in a thermodynamic cycle
adiabatic and isothermal compression or exansion
isentropic expansion
and so forth
there are lots of cycles Rankine, Otto, Diesel, Stirling, Ericcson, Brayton... google finds plenty of images
"Carding" an engine actually plots one for you.
 
  • #34
Baluncore said:
Please attach video to your post rather than embed video in your post. My internet is volume restricted and slow. I cannot follow threads that lock up my slow wireless links. I have unwatched this thread.
Sorry for that. However I do not see how embedding a youtube video is any different than embedding a photo. To my understanding the video will not play unless you click on it, so you have the option of not watching them anyway and no video streaming will waste your bandwidth. Maybe you should ask people to avoid embedding pictures as well, as they may have the same effect on your internet connection (?). Please (anyone) let me know in case I broke some forum rules or something. I will be happy to fully adhere to any guidelines for better use of the forums. I posted the videos because I thought they were informative, and by embedding them you could watch them without leaving the forums. Thanks.
 
  • #35
jim hardy said:
i think it'd be the processes in a thermodynamic cycle

JIm, you are certainly correct as far as the nature of the problem. The mathematical description is something else. With most "equivalent circuits," you can simply apply Kirchoff's laws and have the describing equations. In the steam engine, the best I've been able to do is to describe them indicator card piecemeal, with several different descriptions spliced together to get a good approximation to an actual card (Ive been trying to model a diesel engine card). It is a lot of trial and error (bash to fit and paint to match) sort of thing.
 
  • Like
Likes jim hardy
  • #36
OldEngr63 said:
With most "equivalent circuits," you can simply apply Kirchoff's laws and have the describing equations.
I've always said we EE's have it easy - our stuff is well behaved. No mass, no entropy, no pvγ .

Ohm's law for mechanical engineers is Bernoulli's equation and it's intimidating with all those ρ, ν2, 2g, CD terms.
But they have one huge advantage - they can see their stuff move.
Maybe that's why i so enjoyed electric machinery class.

old jim
 
  • #37
Hi Jim
I think your idea is sound' the only reason why diesel engines are efficient is because they use the heat of the engine to vapourise the fuel. Applying the same idea to steam engines we come up with the flash boiler or hot top engine. Off course its a hell of a control problem but that's what computers do best.
 
  • #38
Keggyleg said:
Hi Jim
I think your idea is sound' the only reason why diesel engines are efficient is because they use the heat of the engine to vapourise the fuel. Applying the same idea to steam engines we come up with the flash boiler or hot top engine. Off course its a hell of a control problem but that's what computers do best.

Look up "feedwater heater", it is a feature of almost all steam systems.
 
  • #39
Consider the phut-phut model boat which draws water onto its hot parts then shoots it out as steam then the steam condenses drawing in more water to its hot parts thus repeating. The technology must be in its infancy.
 
  • #40
Keggyleg said:
I think your idea is sound' the only reason why diesel engines are efficient is because they use the heat of the engine to vapourise the fuel.
Not quite. The fuel is atomised at the injectors. The energy to atomise the fuel comes from the fuel injection pump, either a common rail or a “jerk” pump that is driven by the engine crankshaft.

The diesel efficiency comes from the higher compression ratio possible since ignition cannot occur until the fuel is injected. Pre-ignition in gasoline engines typically limits compression ratio to between 8 and 10. Diesel has a compression ratio between 16 and 21.
 
  • #41
HI
Efficiency is a difficult subject maybe diesel has more calories for your buck but I do know that the engines sometimes need glow plug just until they are hot and sometimes the cylider heads have metal plates which retain the heat of combustion. See this link for old timers flash boilers.

http://www.onthewire.co.uk/flash.htm
 
  • #42
Keggyleg said:
Efficiency is a difficult subject maybe diesel has more calories for your buck but I do know that the engines sometimes need glow plug just until they are hot and sometimes the cylider heads have metal plates which retain the heat of combustion.
You are clearly quite new to diesel engines. This is a bit off topic so I will keep it short.
IC engine efficiency is not a difficult subject at all. The buck is irrelevant. Even running on the same gasoline there is still 50% more energy from the same fuel by burning it in a high compression ratio diesel engine, but when cold it makes more diesel knocking noise because of the delayed combustion. External combustion engines are less efficient than IC engines.

A high speed indirect injection diesel employs glowplugs to start because it has precombustion chambers in the cylinder head. Those precombustion chambers when starting from cold result in immediate condensation of the fuel. The glowplugs are in those chambers only to assist starting from cold. Once hot, the precombustion chambers throw the partially burned fuel out into the cylinder which improves mixing and so speeds up completion of combustion cycle. It produces a cleaner exhaust.

A direct injection, (DI), diesel engine injects the atomised fuel directly into the cylinder. The DI engine runs slower because mixing is poor and combustion takes longer to produce a clean exhaust. To start a very cold DI diesel requires an explosive cartridge, the addition of ether or the burning of a small amount of diesel fuel in the air intake manifold.
 
  • #43
The jist of the story so far is that modern diesel engines are more efficient than old" iron horses " whether or not you factor in that diesel has a higher calorific value than gasoline. But old" iron horses " have not been developed and don't have micro-processors. Flash boilers might be the way to go from the old timers link I posted before. I note that different regions of a flame have different temperatures that would be the way to go. I did some programming in assembly for pics a while back but have many other projects. It would be better to use C and I am licsenced as a Agilent VEE developer which is useful.

Cheers and beers
 
  • #44
Keggyleg said:
whether or not you factor in that diesel has a higher calorific value than gasoline.
Get your facts straight. You need to stop making false statements about subjects you know nothing about.
1kg of diesel has a lower calorific value than 1kg of gasoline.
http://www.acea.be/news/article/differences-between-diesel-and-petrol says;
“The calorific value of diesel fuel is roughly 45.5 MJ/kg (megajoules per kilogram), slightly lower than petrol which is 45.8 MJ/kg.

Diesel engines are efficient because the compression ratio of the engine can be greater. That is independent of the fuel calorific value.
 
  • #45
Baluncore said:
Get your facts straight. You need to stop making false statements about subjects you know nothing about.
1kg of diesel has a lower calorific value than 1kg of gasoline.
http://www.acea.be/news/article/differences-between-diesel-and-petrol says;
“The calorific value of diesel fuel is roughly 45.5 MJ/kg (megajoules per kilogram), slightly lower than petrol which is 45.8 MJ/kg.

Diesel engines are efficient because the compression ratio of the engine can be greater. That is independent of the fuel calorific value.

Yes, but fuel efficiency of vehicles is often expressed per volume of fuel, not per mass of fuel, and diesel is significantly denser than gasoline. As a result, diesel has substantially more energy per liter than gasoline, which is clearly what was intended. Your reference even states this quite clearly.
 
  • #46
cjl said:
Yes, but fuel efficiency of vehicles is often expressed per volume of fuel, not per mass of fuel,
But not for the comparison between fuels, except by the uneducated public. That is because liquid hydrocarbon density is highly temperature dependent. It is unscientific to use volume without some temperature specification.

If an unpackaged material flows then it is traded commercially by volume, if it does not flow, then it is sold by mass. Gasoline and diesel fuels are bought and sold by volume because it is difficult to put them on the scales. A local fuel distributor was involved in a dispute when it turned out they were delivering hot fuel to the underground tanks at the filling stations. They were profiting by the their thermal expansion of the fuel.

Miles per gallon, mpg, was used by drivers to estimate available range.
Litres per 100km, is now used by car buyers to estimate future economy.
But it is the mass of fuel that is always used in scientific and engineering discussions.
Since this is an engineering forum, drivers should leave their unscientific baggage outside the door.

The SI unit for specific energy is kJ/kg. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specific_energy
An old engineering measure of fuel economy was; pounds per (horsepower * hour).
Another often quoted engineering reference figure is that it takes 14.5 pounds of air to burn one pound of fuel.

All those specify mass so as to eliminate the changing effects of volume, temperature and density.
 
  • #47
Baluncore said:
But not for the comparison between fuels, except by the uneducated public. That is because liquid hydrocarbon density is highly temperature dependent. It is unscientific to use volume without some temperature specification.

Who cares if it's unscientific? Fuel is sold by volume, vehicle fuel capacity is volumetric, and thus, for the vast majority of measures that matter when comparing diesel to gasoline, volumetric fuel energy content and fuel efficiency are the parameters that matter. Thus, it is perfectly reasonable to assume that's what Keggyleg was referring to, and it's annoyingly and unnecessarily pedantic to "correct" them, especially with a statement like "You need to stop making false statements about subjects you know nothing about".
 
  • #48
cjl said:
Who cares if it's unscientific?
I do. This is a physics and engineering forum. If it is not scientific then it should be corrected or deleted. Your resort to rhetoric suggests you are emotional and so unable to appreciate the scientific analysis behind the arguments.

cjl said:
Fuel is sold by volume, vehicle fuel capacity is volumetric, and thus, for the vast majority of measures that matter when comparing diesel to gasoline, volumetric fuel energy content and fuel efficiency are the parameters that matter.
That is commerce and marketing, it leads to commercial rorts and misinformation based on fuel density. It is energy to mass ratio that regulates vehicle acceleration and climb efficiency. Volume is largely unimportant, there is ample space for fuel, there is critically limited payload. Every extra kg of unnecessary fuel reduces the payload by one kg, and that is true, both commercially and scientifically. You need to face that fact.

cjl said:
Thus, it is perfectly reasonable to assume that's what Keggyleg was referring to, and it's annoyingly and unnecessarily pedantic to "correct" them, especially with a statement like "You need to stop making false statements about subjects you know nothing about".
You need to go back and read all Keggyleg's statements that I have questioned. Then, if you analyse them, you will realize that they contain a number of false assertions. They do not rationally explain the significant efficiency gained by increased compression ratio. This thread was discussing improvement to the efficiency of expansion engines. Compression ratio and compounding of the expansion are much more important than even a factor of two in the density of the fuel.

@ cjl; You see an attack on a writer's unscientific and false statements as an attack on the writer. You then rush in late to defend the writer of the false statements. But at some point the stream of ongoing false statements needs to be stopped. If the use of scientific analysis and engineering principles cannot educate the writer, then it is necessary to use language understood by the writer to persuade the writer think again, or the thread needs to be closed.
 
  • #49
Baluncore said:
I do. This is a physics and engineering forum. If it is not scientific then it should be corrected or deleted. Your resort to rhetoric suggests you are emotional and so unable to appreciate the scientific analysis behind the arguments.
Unnecessary pedantry helps nobody though, and jumping down people's throats for minor technical inaccuracies when their broad point is both correct and easily understood is not helpful to the discussion.

Baluncore said:
That is commerce and marketing, it leads to commercial rorts and misinformation based on fuel density. It is energy to mass ratio that regulates vehicle acceleration and climb efficiency. Volume is largely unimportant, there is ample space for fuel, there is critically limited payload. Every extra kg of unnecessary fuel reduces the payload by one kg, and that is true, both commercially and scientifically. You need to face that fact.
This would be true if we were talking about long range aircraft or rockets, where the fuel mass is a substantial proportion of the vehicle's overall mass. However, for cars (or trucks, or trains, or ships), fuel mass is a relatively insignificant portion of the mass of the vehicle, and volumetric constraints tend to be tighter than mass constraints (10-25 gallons of fuel takes up a fairly significant volume under a car), and the volume of the fuel is fixed by the design of the vehicle. When traveling somewhere, you really do not care about the mass of fuel your car can hold - you care about the volume.

Baluncore said:
You need to go back and read all Keggyleg's statements that I have questioned. Then, if you analyse them, you will realize that they contain a number of false assertions. They do not rationally explain the significant efficiency gained by increased compression ratio. This thread was discussing improvement to the efficiency of expansion engines. Compression ratio and compounding of the expansion are much more important than even a factor of two in the density of the fuel.
I have read the statements, and I agree there were some false assertions. However, you were quick to jump in and declare someone as knowing "nothing" about a subject when their point was relatively easily understood (and not fundamentally incorrect)

Baluncore said:
@ cjl; You see an attack on a writer's unscientific and false statements as an attack on the writer. You then rush in late to defend the writer of the false statements. But at some point the stream of ongoing false statements needs to be stopped. If the use of scientific analysis and engineering principles cannot educate the writer, then it is necessary to use language understood by the writer to persuade the writer think again, or the thread needs to be closed.

No, I am quick to become annoyed at excessive nitpicking and pedantry, as it distracts from the conversation and forces the reader to wade through large amounts of unnecessary and unneeded text. If you had simply commented "calorific value usually refers to mass energy density, not volumetric" and left it at that, I wouldn't have jumped in at all, since that is a relevant, interesting, and useful piece of additional information. You instead took the opportunity to declare the other poster as "knowing nothing", which (as I said before) was both needless and irrelevant.

In addition, your statements aren't even completely factual. There is no inherent reason why diesel must have a higher compression ratio than gasoline, and the compression ratio alone does not explain the differences in efficiency. Reduction of pumping losses due to the lack of air throttling, lean burn at part throttle, and lower RPM in the powerband also have significant effects on the efficiency, as do several other factors. In some cases, lowering the compression of a diesel actually helps its efficiency. For example, Mazda's last generation 2.2 liter diesel had a compression ratio of 16.3:1, and their new one lowered that to 14:1 (the same as their 2.0L gas engine, interestingly enough) as part of a major effort to improve efficiency, largely because it allowed for an improvement in the homogeneity of the burn and a reduction in cylinder wall friction, as well as a substantial reduction in weight (and therefore inertia) of internal components. Internal combustion engine efficiency is a complex topic, and there are many things involved in maximizing it.
 
  • #50
cjl said:
Unnecessary pedantry helps nobody though,
So you quoted and accepted my first point, then attached your irrelevant personal statement.

cjl said:
This would be true if we were talking about long range aircraft or rockets, where the fuel mass is a substantial proportion of the vehicle's overall mass. However, for cars (or trucks, or trains, or ships), fuel mass is a relatively insignificant portion of the mass of the vehicle, and volumetric constraints tend to be tighter than mass constraints (10-25 gallons of fuel takes up a fairly significant volume under a car), and the volume of the fuel is fixed by the design of the vehicle. When traveling somewhere, you really do not care about the mass of fuel your car can hold - you care about the volume.
You have clearly not thought that through before you wrote it. You have most of it backwards.

Cars can always be designed to carry a greater volume of fuel at the expense of luggage capacity. 4WDs can get replacement tanks that mount in the same position but often with double the capacity because there is so much unseen and unused space under the vehicle.

A CI engine can run on gasoline so long as it is contaminated with oil. A CI diesel vehicle will then travel about half as far again as a SI gasoline engine for the same volume or mass of the same fuel. Gasoline is more expensive to process than diesel. Diesel is safer and more economic than gasoline. Consider a diesel truck with a 300 litre fuel capacity. With a gasoline engine it would require 450 litres of more expensive gasoline to have the same range, and the payload would be reduced by about 150kg.
Compression ratio trumps fuel density every time.

The only hard limits are GVM, the mass of the fuel and the distance between filling stations. Get yourself a truck license and then contemplate the fine if you are 1kg over GVM. Take a look under a truck to see where there is plenty of room for more tank capacity. As I wrote, every kg of fuel reduces the payload by 1kg.

cjl said:
No, I am quick to become annoyed at excessive nitpicking and pedantry, as it distracts from the conversation and forces the reader to wade through large amounts of unnecessary and unneeded text.
You mean like your post #49.
Where;
cjl said:
In addition, your statements aren't even completely factual.
And then follow it with;
cjl said:
There is no inherent reason why diesel must have a higher compression ratio than gasoline, and the compression ratio alone does not explain the differences in efficiency.
Yes there is and yes it does. You know NOT of what you write. Get your facts straight.

It takes at least a 15:1 CR for CI engines to start and run properly. SI engines running available ULP preignite when the CR is over about 10:1. Premium fuel is more expensive and gets you a little further before you must switch to ethanol. Only an idiot would build a CI engine with an effective compression ratio below 15:1 as it would be inefficient without a turbo or supercharger. You must multiply the air charger boost ratio by the cylinder ratio to get the effective CR. Many diesels operate at about 21:1 above which the heat of compression threatens piston material thermal limits and engine reliability.
You point to the Mazda Sky-D as having a 14:1 CR, but you fail to note that it takes a two stage turbocharger to recover the CR and the associated efficiency.

The compression ratio does not explain it all, but it totally dominates the economics.

Articles about the Mazda Sky-G claim the improvement in economy is due to compression ratio at the expense of premium fuel.
QED.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top