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Influence of Valve-Seat Angles to Operation Values and Emissions of Medium-Speed Diesel Engines Cover

Influence of Valve-Seat Angles to Operation Values and Emissions of Medium-Speed Diesel Engines

Open Access
|Mar 2023

Abstract

For the development of gas exchange for large diesel engines, a compromise has to be found between efficient valve-flow and the time between overhauls. On the one hand, large effective flow areas, especially during valve-overlap, are demanded. On the other hand, there are limitations of cylinder bore regarding the maximum diameter of inlet and outlet valves and the minimum distance (dead space) between valves and piston, as well as wear-related smaller seat angles. For large medium-speed diesel engines, a valve-seat angle of β = 30° for inlet and outlet valves is a standard application. For engine-operation with clean fuels, a valve-seat lubrication (gasoil) or smaller seat angles (natural gas) need to be applied. With this presentation, the basic influence of different valve-seat angles on the operation values and emissions will be considered for the example of the single-cylinder research engine FM16/24. Using a self-developed testbed, experimental investigations into effective flow areas as a function of valve-lift at inlet and outlet valves have to be executed. With this input, different cycle calculations including T/C have to be carried out to determine deviances in specific fuel-oil consumption, exhaust-gas temperatures, NOx emissions and air/fuel ratio. The results will be discussed critically.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/ama-2023-0019 | Journal eISSN: 2300-5319 | Journal ISSN: 1898-4088
Language: English
Page range: 173 - 179
Submitted on: Sep 14, 2022
Accepted on: Dec 11, 2022
Published on: Mar 19, 2023
Published by: Bialystok University of Technology
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2023 Leander Marquardt, Heiner-Joachim Katke, Andreas Reinke, Niklas Kockskämper, published by Bialystok University of Technology
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.