From the article.VW is replacing its 1.4 liter three-cylinder diesel with a four-cylinder 1.6 for cars like the Polo, they said, while Renault is planning a near-10 percent enlargement to its 1.6 liter R9M diesel, which had replaced a 1.9-litre model in 2011.
In real-driving conditions, the French carmaker's 0.9-litre gasoline H4Bt injects excess fuel to prevent overheating, resulting in high emissions of unburned hydrocarbons, fine particles and carbon monoxide.
Cleaning that up with exhaust technology would be too expensive, sources say, so the three-cylinder will be dropped for a larger successor developing more torque at lower regimes to stay cool.
You mean readucing number of cylinders delay complete combustion? If so, what´s the reason?Brian Coat wrote:Your cylinder number question: Whether or not reducing the number of cylinders, for a given engine size would make matters better/worse, would depend on how you did it; but in general, things which delay complete combustion have the potential to make things worse knock-wise. It's not really a fix, I fear.
I think I'm missing something here. In the context we are discussing (over-fuelling in downsized+boosted engines to avoid knock?), I am not following how the AFR/dissociation relationship would affect anything, given that the end-gas is essentially uncombusted charge and the dissociation occurs during actual combustion?Tommy Cookers wrote:well at the moment I think that ..........
the cooling effect of rich mixture may be overestimated in some people's minds - since all the fuel cools, not just the 'rich' few %
dissociation is a bad thing, it is strongly driven by combustion temperature, and so maxes at stoichiometric fuelling (of a boosted engine)
richening helps in part by cooling but strongly by chemical effects on combustion and deterrence of the suplus fuel to the dissociation
these effects were established with aviation fuel rating in the 1930s and are apparent in motor fuels tested using aviation (supercharge) procedures
so must to some extent apply to our subject engines here
richening reducing dissociation gives a cooler exhaust (so a cooler catalyst) because more heat has been converted to work
btw
dissociation means some carbon dioxide partway through the stroke changes to carbon monoxide and oxygen and absorbs much heat....
then later in the stroke as expansion causes further cooling, reassociation changes these back into carbon dioxide and emits the heat