- Petrol engine
A Petrol engine or Gasoline engine is an
internal combustion engine with spark-ignition designed to run on petrol (gasoline ) and similar volatile fuels. It differs from adiesel engine in the method of mixing the fuel and air, and in the fact that it uses spark plugs. In a diesel engine, merely the air is compressed, and the fuel is injected at the end of the compression stroke. In a petrol engine, the fuel and air are pre-mixed beforecompression injection . Pre-mixing of fuel and air allows a petrol engine to run at a much higher speed than a diesel, but severely limits their compression, and thus efficiency .Applications
Petrol engines have many applications, including:
* Motor cars
*Motorcycle s
*Aircraft
*Motorboat s
* Small machines, such aslawn mower s,chainsaw s and portableEngine-generator sDesign
Working cycles
Petrol engines may run on the four-stroke cycle or the two-stroke cycle. For details of working cycles see:
*
Four-stroke cycle
*Two-stroke cycle
*Wankel engine Cylinder arrangement
Common cylinder arrangements are from 1 to 6 cylinders in-line or from 2 to 16 cylinders in V-formation. Alternatives include Rotary and Radial Engines the latter typically have 7 or 9 cylinders in a single ring, or 10 or 14 cylinders in two rings.
Cooling
Petrol engines may be air-cooled, by fins on the cylinders, or liquid-cooled, by a
water jacket andradiator . The coolant was formerly water but is now usually a mixture of water andethylene glycol . This mixture has a lower freezing-point and a higher boiling-point than pure water. In addition, the cooling system is usually slightly pressurized to minimise evaporation of coolant.Compression ratio
The
compression ratio is the ratio between the cylinder volumes at the beginning and end of the compression stroke. Broadly speaking, the higher the compression ratio, the higher the efficiency of the engine. However, compression ratio has to be limited to avoid pre-ignition of the fuel-air mixture which would causeengine knocking and damage to the engine. Modern motor-car engine generally have compression ratios of between 9:1 and 10:1, but this can go up to 11 or 12:1 for high-performance engines that run on, say, 98 R0N (93 AKI, US Premium- or European Super-grade) petrol. In the 1950s, with low-octane fuel and less well-designed cylinder heads, compression ratios were between 6.5:1 and 7:1. Oldtractor engines running ontractor vaporising oil might have compression ratios as low as 4.5:1 but modern tractors have diesel engines.Ignition
:"main article
Ignition system "Petrol engines usespark ignition andhigh voltage current for the spark may be provided by a magneto or anignition coil . In modern car engines theignition timing is managed by an electronicEngine Control Unit .Future
Concerns about
global warming andair pollution have put a question mark over the future of the petrol engine. Much has been done to improve itsfuel efficiency and reduce emissions and this has bought it more time.ources
* Linked Wikipedia articles
External Links
* [http://www.kenneyjacob.com/2008/08/27/petrol-or-diesel-how-to-decide-when-you-buy-a-car/ Petrol or Diesel - How to decide when you buy a car]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.