Internal Combustion Engineering: Science & Technology

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Sir Diarmuid Downs, CBE, FEng, FRS Engineering is about designing and making marketable artefacts. The element of design is what principally distinguishes engineering from science. The engineer is a creator. He brings together knowledge and experience from a variety of sources to serve his ends, producing goods of value to the individual and to the community. An important source of information on which the engineer draws is the work of the scientist or the scientifically minded engineer. The pure scientist is concerned with knowledge for its own sake and receives his greatest satisfaction if his experimental observations fit into an aesthetically satisfying theory. The applied scientist or engineer is also concerned with theory, but as a means to an end. He tries to devise a theory which will encompass the known experimental facts, both because an all embracing theory somehow serves as an extra validation of the facts and because the theory provides us with new leads to further fruitful experimental investigation. I have laboured these perhaps rather obvious points because they are well exemplified in this present book. The first internal combustion engines, produced just over one hundred years ago, were very simple, the design being based on very limited experimental information. The current engines are extremely complex and, while the basic design of cylinder, piston, connecting rod and crankshaft has changed but little, the overall performance in respect of specific power, fuel economy, pollution, noise and cost has been absolutely transformed.

Author(s): M. T. Overington (auth.), John H. Weaving (eds.)
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Year: 1990

Language: English
Pages: 1990
Tags: Mechanical Engineering

Front Matter....Pages i-xvii
Combustion in Spark-ignition Engines....Pages 1-32
Applied Research into Combustion in Small Diesel Engines....Pages 33-63
The Two-stroke Engine: Crankcase Compression Type....Pages 65-101
The Two-stroke Engine: the Blowdown and Uniflow Scavenge Process....Pages 103-136
Stratified Charge Engines....Pages 137-171
Mixture Preparation for Spark-ignition Engines....Pages 173-211
Diesel Engine Fuel Injection Processes and Spray Diagnostic Methods....Pages 213-242
Turbulent Flows in Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engines....Pages 243-285
Combustion in Gasoline Engines....Pages 287-331
Combustion in the Diesel Engine....Pages 333-384
Computer Simulation of Fluid Flow and Combustion in Reciprocating Engines....Pages 385-444
The Theory of Wave Action Approaches Applied to Reciprocating Engines....Pages 445-500
The Application of Wave Action Techniques to Reciprocating Engines....Pages 501-614
The Turbocharger....Pages 615-706
Atmospheric Pollution....Pages 707-793
Instrumentation for Engine Flows....Pages 795-856
Back Matter....Pages 857-865