- Quasiturbine
The Quasiturbine or Qurbine engine is a proposed
pistonless rotary engine using a rhomboidal rotor whose sides are hinged at the vertices. The volume enclosed between the sides of the rotor and the rotor casing provide compression and expansion in a fashion similar to the more familiarWankel engine , but the hinging at the edges allows the volume ratio to increase.Patent s for the Quasiturbine (in the most general AC concept with carriages) [ [http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?patentnumber=6164263 US Patent Quasiturbine AC (With Carriages) Dec. 1996] ] [ [http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?patentnumber=6899075 US Patent Quasiturbine SC (Without Carriage) Feb. 2003] ] are held by the Saint-Hilaire family ofQuebec . As well as aninternal combustion engine , the Quasiturbine has been proposed as a possiblepump design, and a possibleStirling engine [ [http://quasiturbine.promci.qc.ca/ETypeStirling.htm Quasiturbine Stirling engine] Stirling engine idea on the Quasiturbine website.] . It has been demonstrated as apneumatic engine using storedcompressed air , and as asteam engine [Quasiturbine Low RPM High Torque Pressure Driven Turbine for Top Efficiency Power Modulation. Peers reviewed paper - Published in The Proceeding of Turbo Expo 2007 of the IGTI (International Gas Turbine Institute) and ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers). [http://www.quasiturbine.com/QTPapiers/ASME2007QTMontreal.pdf Abstract] and [http://www.quasiturbine.com/Presse/QTASME2007.htm info] ] .There are at least four proposed designs:
* Two-port with carriages, suitable for use as aninternal combustion engine .
* Four-port without carriages, suitable for use as apneumatic or hydraulic engine,steam engine orpump .
* Two-port without carriages, a conceptual design which is hoped to combine some of the advantages of the existing two- and four-port prototypes.
* Another conceptual design using a fixed charge of gas, with no ports and without carriages, as aStirling engine .The main problems with this design are
* it has far moremoving parts than theWankel engine
* it has never been shown to work as an internal combustion engine
* for all other possible uses there are many other designs that are more reliable and function more efficientlyTwo-port with carriages
The earliest Quasiturbine design used a three-wheeled "carriage" (French "chariot", hence "avec chariots" or "AC" for "with carriages") to support each vertex of the rotor. The wheels of these four carriages, making twelve wheels in total, ran around the periphery of the engine chamber.
A prototype of an internal combustion engine to this design was constructed, and enthusiastically reviewed in
European Automotive Design magazine September, 1999. The prototype was turned by an external engine for 40 hours.However, ignition with fuel was never achieved. If it was attempted no results were ever released, and development work on this design was suspended.
Advantages
* Cylinder ports in place of valves reduce the number of moving parts, in common with the
Wankel engine and sometwo stroke engine s.
* The carriages keep the seals almost perpendicular to the cylinder walls, in contrast to the Wankel engine where the angle varies plus and minus 60°.
* The rotor can be designed so itscentre of gravity remains stationary or nearly so, minimising vibration.
* Sixteen strokes per revolution of the rotor, as opposed to twelve for a single-rotor Wankel engine and two for a revolution of the crankshaft of a single-cylinder single-acting piston engine.Photo-detonation
Detonation and hybrid are two different means to harvest the low efficiency of reduced power piston engine, and both are compatible with efficient electrical (in-wheel) power train. Detonation engine is however a more direct and efficient way, and because the « on board fuel » is already a form of energy storage, detonation engine avoid to re-stock this energy electrically into batteries. The chemical energy stored in the fuel is degraded when chemically re-stored into batteries.
The two-port design with carriages was proposed to make possible a new and superior mode of combustion, termed "photo-detonation" by the Quasiturbine inventors. This resembles
detonation , as used in theBourke engine , akin to knocking and pinging undesirable in common internal combustion engines.As of 2005 , no research has been published supporting this claim. A related idea that "flame transfer" would be possible through special ports is similarly unsupported.Four-port without carriages
The second Quasiturbine design is greatly simplified to eliminate the carriages (French "sans chariots" or "SC"). At the same time, the ports were duplicated on the opposite side of the housing, thus converting the operation from four strokes per cycle to two and doubling the number of cycles per rotor revolution. This mechanism has been demonstrated running as a
pneumatic engine using stored compressed air, and also as asteam engine . This is also the design proposed for use as apump , and particularly as asupercharger .This design uses redesigned blades, longer than those for a similar sized housing of the first type owing to the absence of the carriages, and lacking the distinctive crown contour. Only the basic rotor geometry is common with the earlier design.
A pneumatic engine of this design was demonstrated powering a go-kart in November 2004, and another powering a small car in September 2005, both vehicles using stored compressed air to power the engine.
As of 2005 a pneumaticchain saw driven by an air hose from a conventional external compressor is under development.With a suitably redesigned housing to allow for thermal expansion, the same rotor design has been demonstrated as a steam engine.
Another potential variation of this design uses the two sets of ports independently, one as an engine and the other as a pump, thus potentially integrating the functions of a pump and its driving motor in one shaftless unit. One restriction of this usage is that the two fluids must be similar; It would not be possible for example to drive an integrated air pump with hydraulic fluid, as the rotor design is significantly different.
As of 2005 no prototype of this variation has been demonstrated.Advantages
* Fewer moving parts than most engines (including of course the Quasiturbine design with carriages).
** Absence ofvalve gear required by many other forms of steam and pneumatic engines.
* Little vibration.
* Highpower-to-weight ratio .
* Possibility of integratedturbo-pump andturbo-expander configurations.Two-port without carriages
This third design combines aspects of the first two.
As of 2005 this design is conceptual only. It has not been built, but is used for purposes of illustration. If built it would not support photo-detonation.Many other designs are possible within the patented Quasiturbine model, with or without carriages and with differing numbers of ports.
As of 2005 , which design will be used for further work on the internal combustion version has not been announced.History
The Quasiturbine was conceived by a group of 4 researchers, led by Dr. Gilles Saint-Hilaire, a
thermonuclear physicist , and consisting of members of his immediate family. The original objective was to make a turbo-shaftturbine engine where the compressor portion and the power portion would be in the same plane. In order to achieve this, they had to disconnect the blades from the main shaft, and chain them around in such a way that a single rotor acts as a compressor for a quarter turn, and as an engine the following quarter of a turn.The general concept of the Quasiturbine was first patented in 1996. Small pneumatic and steam units are available from the patent holders for sale or hire for research, academic training and industrial demonstration, as is a book (largely in French) describing the concepts and development of the design. Lacking any forced lubrication system, these engines function only for short periods, a few hours at most, before requiring maintenance.
The patent holders have announced that they intend to make similar internal combustion prototypes available for demonstration.
See also
*
Compressed air engine
*Compressed air vehicle
*Pistonless rotary engine , which discusses general advantages of rotary engines and comparisons between Quasiturbine, Wankel and orbital (Sarich) engines.References
External links
* [http://www.quasiturbine.com Quasiturbine official site] .
** [http://www.quasiturbine.com/Presse/Quantum0312Typo.pdf eMotionReports Quasiturbine White Paper] (PDF , 247 KB).
** [http://www.quasiturbine.com/QTCromWP0510.doc Crom's Quasiturbine Comparison White Paper] (Microsoft Word format, 232 KB).
* [http://auto.howstuffworks.com/quasiturbine.htm How Quasiturbine Engines Work] fromHowStuffWorks .
* [http://www.promci.qc.ca/pureinvention/apuq/APUQFestEcolo050925.htm Article] on demonstration of a pneumatic Quasiturbine car, mainly in French.
* [http://www.iaea.or.at/programmes/inis/ws/d2/r1785.html Quasiturbine] entry onINIS atInternational Atomic Energy Agency .
* [http://www.americanantigravity.com/documents/Quasiturbine-Interview.pdf "The Quasiturbine Gilles Saint-Hilaire on Next Generation Rotary-Engines"] , interview with Tim Ventura,April 24 2006 , "American Antigravity" (pdf)
* [http://peswiki.com/index.php/PowerPedia:Quasiturbine Quasiturbine on peswiki.com]
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