Self ignition temperature (SIT) of a fuel is the temperature at which the fuel ignites on its own without spark. If large amount of mixture in an engine cylinder auto ignites, there will be a rapid rise in pressure causing direct blow on engine structure accompanied by thudding sound. This causes vibrations in the engine. The phenomenon is called knocking.
If
however, a small pocket of fuel-air mixture auto ignites, pressure waves are
generated which travel with the speed of sound across the cylinder. These
pressure waves are of such small duration that indicator diagram mechanism
fails to record them. These waves interact within themselves and with the
cylinder walls, creating characteristics ping sound. The phenomenon is called pinking.
The
engine runs rough, overheats and loses efficiency due to knocking and pinking.
The
processes of knocking and pinking are related to the nature of the fuel and
relative merits of the fuel are decided on the basis of their anti-pinking and
anti-knock property. The merit is measured by octane number such that a fuel of
high octane number will be liable to less pink or knock as compared to a fuel
of low octane number in the same engine. It is important to note that the
same fuel will show same tendency to pink or knock in all engines.
Commonly
used fuel in SI engines is a mixture of iso-octane and n-heptane. Iso-octane
has minimum tendency to knock and this fuel is arbitrarily assigned an octane number of 100 (ON = 100) where
as n-heptane has maximum knocking tendency with ON = 0. The octane number of a
given fuel is percentage of iso-octane in the mixture of iso-octane and
n-heptane. Thus a fuel other than mixture of iso-octane and n-heptane if
assigned an ON of 80, it means, it will knock under standard operating
condition similar to the mixture of 80% iso-octane and 20% n-heptane.
The tendency to knock in an engine
increases with the increase in compression ratio. The highest compression upto
which no knocking occurs in a given engine is called highest useful compression ratio (HUCR).
Certain chemical compounds when
added to the fuel successfully suppress the knocking tendency. Tetra-ethyl lead
[Pb(C2 H5)4] also commonly called TEL and
tetra-methyl lead [Pb(CH3)4]
also referred to as TML are effective dopes in the automobile fuel to check knocking.
They are called as anti-knocking agents.
However, because of lead poisoning effects TEL and TML are not being used
now-a-days. In stead, some organic auto knocking agents have been developed to
check the undesirable effects like knocking.
In CI engine air alone is compressed
to a compression ratio of 15 to 20 (commonly). The fuel is injected under a
pressure of 120 to 210 bars about 20° to 35° before TDC. As the fuel in the
engine starts to evaporate the pressure in the cylinder drops and it delays the
ignition process by a small amount. The time between beginning of injection and
the beginning of combustion is known as the delay period which consists of time for atomization, vapourization
and mixing along with time of chemical reaction prior to auto-ignition. The
combustion of fuel continues in the expansion and is called after burning. Increased delay period
causes accumulation of atomized fuel in the combustion chamber and as the
pressure and temperature continue to rise at one instant, the bulk of fuel auto-ignites.
This would result in high forces on the structure of the engine causing
vibration and rough running.
The CI engine fuel rating is based
on ignition delay and is measured in terms of cetane number. Cetane fuel [C16 H34] has very
low delay period and is arbitrarily assigned a cetane number of 100. Another
fuel a α-methyl-napthalene [C11 H10] has poor ignition quality
and is assigned zero cetane number. The volume percentage of cetane in a
mixture of cetane and a-methyl naphthalene is the cetane number of the fuel
that produces same delay period as the mixture under specified test conditions.
Additives such as methyl nitrate, ethyl thio-nitrate and amyl nitrate increase
cetane number of a fuel respectively by 13.5%, 10% and 9% if added to the
extent of 0.5%.
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