The Influence of Sinusoidal Piston Motion on the Thermal Efficiency of Engines

871916

10/1/1987

Authors
Abstract
Content
A new technique of translating linear to rotary motion, using the Stiller- Smith mechanism, can be applied to the design of internal combustion engines and compressors. This new mechanism produces purely sinusoidal motion of the pistons relative to crank angle, which is a different motion from that produced by a conventional slider-crank mechanism, Influence of this sinusoidal motion on thermodynamic performance of engines and compressors was investigated theoretically and experimentally. Data are presented from a numerical analysis of compression and of spark-ignited combustion. Also, pressure-time curves for a standard and a modified (long connecting rod) spark ignition engine are compared. All data confirm that there is little thermodynamic difference between the Stiller-Smith and slider-crank devices.
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/871916
Citation
Clark, N., Smith, J., George, A., Hurter, P., et al., "The Influence of Sinusoidal Piston Motion on the Thermal Efficiency of Engines," Passenger Car Meeting & Exposition, Dearborn, Michigan, United States, October 19, 1987, https://doi.org/10.4271/871916.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
10/1/1987
Product Code
871916
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English