Those of you with an interest in the automotive industry may already be aware that diesel engines have greater compression ratios and provide more power than their gasoline counterparts, but you may be unaware as to why. While the main difference between diesel and gas engines lies in the timing of the fuel delivery system, this one difference produces far reaching consequences that allow the larger diesel engines of the modern era to operate with greater efficiency than gasoline models could ever provide.
To understand the main difference between diesel and gasoline engines, it can be helpful to compare each of the four strokes that pistons in each engine type undergo. Both diesel and gasoline engines have intake, compression, ignition, and exhaust strokes in their cycles, and both are designed to ignite fuel and convert it to mechanical energy.
The following occurs in each engine type during each stroke:
The effects on power that the higher compression ratios in a diesel engine are able to achieve are impressive. Because gasoline engines use lower compression to prevent the spontaneous ignition of fuel and air which creates excessive heat and leads to engine knocking, their compression ratios range from 8:1 to 12:1. Diesel, on the other hand, relies on the higher temperatures achieved with greater compression ratios to ignite the fuel; the ratios for these engines range from 14:1 to 25:1.
Greater compression translates into greater amounts of power available to do mechanical work, but it also translates into more efficient use of fuel. In addition, diesel fuel itself contains a higher amount of stored energy per gallon when compared to gasoline. These two factors combined allow diesel engines to deliver the improved mileage they are known for when compared to equivalent gasoline models.
Because the compressed air within diesel engines must obtain a temperature high enough to spontaneously ignite fuel, diesel engines typically need help to achieve those temperatures when starting cold. Traditionally, diesel engines used glow plugs, or electrically heated wires, to heat the interior of each cylinder enough to allow the engine to start. In the larger, more advanced diesel engines of today, computer control delays the timing of fuel injection during cold weather to allow greater compression of the air within each cylinder, creating more heat and allowing the engine to start without the help of glow plugs.
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Posted by Jeremy Fisher on Friday, August 14, 2015
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