[can of worms]
Hmm... Researching, it looks like this was an issue of theory meeting practice and in theory I was wrong...
Steamking said:
I don't think so. Using the waste heat to boil the water into steam, run the steam thru a turbine, and re-condense it for a closed system necessarily introduces additional inefficiencies into the process of turning waste heat into electrical energy.
I'm not saying the added steam plant is 100% efficient. What I'm saying is that the added steam plant does not ever harm the efficiency of the ICE you connect it to and if anything will improve the efficiency due to the lower exhaust manifold pressure it creates - in addition to recovering some of the waste heat.
A turbocharger, on the other hand, obstructs the flow of the exhaust and
can harm the [fuel] efficiency of the engine. Because there are several different possible cases for comparing, there isn't a single answer on fuel efficiency...
cjl said:
...a turbocharged engine...is indeed more efficient than a naturally aspirated engine of the same power output.
That's a little tricky due to the several ways to generate the same power output:
Case 1: Smaller displacement engine of the same peak power as a larger displacement engine. This will generally be more efficient. But that isn't the scenario being discussed:
Case 2 (OP Scenario): Retrofit an existing engine for a turbo. Efficiency will be improved in some of the operating range, but not all of it - particularly not in the lower end or at idle.
Case 3 (OP alternate): Turbo running a generator. It may hold an advantage in total system efficiency due to the higher efficiency of the electric generator vs the car engine.
Some examples:
I drive a Kia Optima, which has the following engines/fuel economies:
2.4L, 200hp -- 28 mpg combined
2.0L Turbo, 274hp -- 26 mph combined
I drive the turbo. The combined fuel economy I get is even worse due to very bad city fuel economy. Seems at idle it still uses a lot of fuel to keep the turbo spinning.
Conversely, here's an article about a VW, with a 2.0 and 2.0 turbo:
http://www.autospeed.com/cms/A_109931/article.html
The turbo is slightly more efficient.
It is likely true that the smaller the engine, the more benefit and less penalty you get from a turbo since the smaller engine will tend to be running at a higher fraction of full power.
My view of the steamer concept for heat recovery is that it probably has more potential for efficiency increases because it isn't at all parasitic at idle, unlike the turbo.