chhitiz
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what is the average air to fuel ratio in spark ignition engines?
Wiki says 14.7:1, air:gasoline.chhitiz said:what is the average air to fuel ratio in spark ignition engines?
reese92tsi said:It depends on the current condition.
When an engine is cold/first being started up the temperature of the cylinders and the fuel is quite low thus fuel atomization is poor. To compensate for the low temp the computer must inject more fuel than necessary due to a lower percentage of the fuel being vaporized. So at start up - depending on temp - air fuel ratios can vary between roughly 7:1-9:1. During idle and cruise after the engine has warmed up the computer oscillates the air fuel ratio very rapidly (many times per second) between rich and lean with an average of 14.7:1. The computer oscillates the air fuel ratio at idle and cruise to ensure proper catalytic converter operation. At wide open throttle the computer enriches the air fuel mixture to combat detonation and produce max torque/horsepower, this ratio can vary between 9:1-13:1 depending on the compression ratio, detonation resistance of the combustion chamber, etc.
This is describing Electronic fuel injection but the principles are very similar across other types of fuel metering systems.
jack action said:The reason why the AFR is so rich when the engine is cold is not because the engine needs more fuel for the combustion, but because the fuel "sticks" to the manifold's walls (like water on a cold window), which means less fuel going to the combustion chamber. As the engine heats up, the "left behind" fuel evaporates and get mixed in the air flow again. That's why on older engines with carburetor, they often have a passage heated by exhaust gas under the intake manifold to accelerate the process while the engine warms up.