Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑26 Apr 2022, 14:04
yes 52% thermodynamic efficiency is remarkable
how does this stand ? ......
at partial power
with exhaust catalysis
at higher lambda
iirc we have natural gas ICEs running over 2 lambda ie 'heat dilution' - unlike F1 MGU-H there's no compounding
does the F1 coating so reduce heat dumped to coolant as to make such high lambda unworthwhile ?
does lean NOx catalysis need heat ?
the stoichiometric-mass heat of natural gas might be a bit higher than F1 gasoline's
does a NOx catalyst need to be upstream of the MGU-H turbine ?
Of course the whole engine must be designed for peak TE at peak power. If the goal was peak TE only, it might be achieved at some lower load point and be even higher than 52%.
The requirement for aftertreatment would be reduced. Anecdotally the current trend to downsized, highly turbocharged engines in road cars has spawned vehicles which are gross emitters at high load (rich AFR to curb knock and thermal loads). High loads are not required during emissions test drive cycles, however many of these vehicles are frequently operated at high loads to enjoy the available performance.
I believe the current F1 engine is not operated at higher lambda because of one or all of the following:
- mechanical limits at 400 bar peak cylinder pressure
- charging pressure ratios already at the efficiency limits for single stage turbomachinery (multi-stage with inter-stage cooling would be a game changer. Road applications would not require such high PR due to lower specific output.)
- pre-chamber / main chamber mixture requirements difficult to control with single DI injector