Compression Ratio PDF
Compression Ratio PDF
Compression Ratio PDF
For compression ratio in data compression, see data com- In a piston engine, it is the ratio between the volume of
pression ratio.
the cylinder and combustion chamber when the piston is
The static compression ratio of an internal-combustion at the bottom of its stroke, and the volume of the combustion chamber when the piston is at the top of its stroke.[1]
For example, a cylinder and its combustion chamber with
the piston at the bottom of its stroke may contain 1000
cc of air (900 cc in the cylinder plus 100 cc in the combustion chamber). When the piston has moved up to the
top of its stroke inside the cylinder, and the remaining
volume inside the head or combustion chamber has been
reduced to 100 cc, then the compression ratio would be
proportionally described as 1000:100, or with fractional
reduction, a 10:1 compression ratio.
A high compression ratio is desirable because it allows an
engine to extract more mechanical energy from a given
mass of air-fuel mixture due to its higher thermal eciency. This occurs because internal combustion engines
are heat engines, and higher eciency is created because
higher compression ratios permit the same combustion
temperature to be reached with less fuel, while giving a
longer expansion cycle, creating more mechanical power
output and lowering the exhaust temperature. It may be
more helpful to think of it as an expansion ratio, since
more expansion reduces the temperature of the exhaust
gases, and therefore the energy wasted to the atmosphere.
Diesel engines actually have a higher peak combustion
temperature than petrol engines, but the greater expansion means they reject less heat in their cooler exhaust.
Higher compression ratios will however make gasoline
engines subject to engine knocking (also known as detonation) if lower octane-rated fuel is used. This can reduce
eciency or damage the engine if knock sensors are not
present to modify the ignition timing. However, knock
sensors have been a requirement of the OBD-II specication used in 1996 model year vehicles and newer.
On the other hand, Diesel engines operate on the principle of compression ignition, so that a fuel which resists
autoignition will cause late ignition, which will also lead
to engine knock.
1 Formula
2.2
A compression ratio of 6.5 or lower is desired for operation on kerosene. The petrol-paran engine version
of the Ferguson TE20 tractor had a compression ratio
of 4.5:1 for operation on tractor vaporising oil with an
octane rating between 55 and 70.[5]
remains low, it is a valve sealing (or more rarely head gasket, or breakthrough piston or, rarer still, cylinder-wall
damage) issue.
If there is a signicant (greater than 10%) dierence between cylinders, that may be an indication that valves or
cylinder head gaskets are leaking, piston rings are worn,
or that the block is cracked.
If the nominal compression ratio of an engine is given, If a problem is suspected, then a more comprehensive test
the pre-ignition cylinder pressure can be estimated using using a leak-down tester can locate the leak.
the following relationship:
p = p0 CR
4 Variable Compression
(VCR) engines
Ratio
7 SEE ALSO
CR =
V1
V2
7 See also
Mean eective pressure
Overall pressure ratio - a closely related ratio for jet
engines
Notes
External links
Here Comes High Compression Engines " 1949
highly detailed article in Popular Science with photos and cutaway drawings
Variable compression engine
Cam Timing vs. Compression Ratio Analysis
Calculating Compression Ratio changes with engine
modications
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Images
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