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  • Deflagration and Detonation

    Originally posted by gmeast View Post
    Hi all,

    I stumbled upon this topic and noticed the ubiquitous argument involving rapid expansion vs explosion.

    In an internal combustion engine there is NO explosion. There is the oxidation of a 'fuel' that has a flame front and finite speed of propagation. It is a fast rate but still finite ... it is nothing more than a rapid burning .. and more specifically the flame or wave front is subsonic. And besides, the point is to heat the air volume in the cylinder to produce a change in pressure. This kind of 'burning' has a rather disappointing name ... "deflagration". This is in contrast to (what most people would call an explosion) a "detonation". The wave front here moves at supersonic speeds.

    In a reaction engine (jets, most rockets) you have deflagration ... just a rapid heating, expansion and acceleration of a mass to produce thrust. But research has produced much improved performance from fuels by implementing techniques that 'detonate' the fuels resulting in the production of a more efficient form of supersonic wave thrust ... the 'Pulse Detonation Engine' ... again not to be confused with pulse jets and ramjets ... which are deflagration engines NOT detonation engines.

    For a more tangible illustration see this video:
    YouTube - The Audible Difference between Deflagration and Detonation

    Attempts have also been made to apply detonation principles to the engines that have a mechanical output ... like a car or truck engine. There are and will be many hurdles for these applications but they're tryin':

    See a Pulse Detonation Turbine Truck Engine here:
    YouTube - Turbine Truck Engines' Hydrogen Powered Pulse Detonation Engine

    ... apples and oranges literally,

    Greg
    Detonation is the term sometimes erroneously used to describe engine pinging under load,
    often caused by faulty exhaust gas recirculation (EGR)system (e.g. carbon buildup plugging one or both ports), misfiring (e.g. bad sparkplug) or pre ignition caused by hot spots on the piston.
    Popular theory was that colliding flame fronts caused "detonation" as it was observed on the test engine having see-thru-cylinder head for taking high-speed pictures.
    On older engines with CR=10.5 adding water or retarding the timing closer to TDC (i.e. lowering combustion temperature) helped to reduce "detonation".
    Al
    Last edited by aljhoa; 04-20-2010, 03:32 PM. Reason: To make paragraph more clear.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by aljhoa View Post
      Detonation is the term sometimes used to describe engine pinging under load,
      often caused by faulty exhaust gas recirculation (EGR)system (e.g. carbon buildup plugging one or both ports), misfiring (e.g. bad sparkplug) or pre ignition caused by hot spots on the piston.
      Popular theory was that colliding flame fronts caused detonation as it was observed on the test engine having see-thru-cylinder head for taking high-speed pictures.
      On older engines with CR=10.5 adding water or advancing the timing helped to reduce detonation.
      Al
      Well, that's the 'LOW TECH" definition of 'detonation'. The scientific, technical and engineering definition is as I have stated it above. 'detonation', 'run-on', 'self ignition', 'auto-ignition', 'pinging' and some rather inaccurate versions are expressions of the of the same thing which is quite different than "detonation" as it applies to what I was referring to in my post.

      By the way, in a perfectly tuned and clean engine, 'pinging' can merely be caused by an insufficient fuel octane rating where simply the heat from compression causes the fuel-air mixture to 'pre-ignite' in the combustion chamber prior to TDC ... the opposite of a 'cetane' rating or 'cetane number' (sort of) which is something you want in a diesel fuel ... you want self-ignition ... which works great there because fuel isn't introduced until the right time (after compression but can be slightly before TDC as with the modern high performance diesel HP common rail fueling systems).

      Comment


      • Fabrication and testing of an enhanced ignition system to reduce cold-start emissions

        Fabrication and testing of an enhanced ignition system to reduce cold-start emissions in an ethanol (E85) light-duty truck engine: G.P. Gardiner

        14 mb document including plug modification for plasma with tungsten.

        Information Bridge: DOE Scientific and Technical Information - Sponsored by OSTI
        Sincerely,
        Aaron Murakami

        Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
        Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
        RPX & MWO http://vril.io

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Aaron View Post
          Has anyone used an off the shelf CDI and simply add a diode from coil
          primary to high voltage? It would be the same as the single cap plasma
          circuit and should work fine. Most would have about a 4uf cap at 400v.
          That is the most common I've seen - at least in that range.

          I have a few CDI's but haven't tried that yet but if it works the same,
          would be the easiest for anyone to do without having to build a circuit.

          A booster cap system could be added at anytime later in parallel with the
          plug.
          have you had success with the CDI idea ? could you sketch out how i would do that....as well as adding the booster cap... I have afew CDI units i could try it on.

          Thx
          D

          Comment


          • using off the shelf cdi

            Dingo,

            I haven't tried an off the shelf cdi with diode.

            Basically, I'd just hook up a cdi and to test it, put a diode with the anode
            on the ignition coil primary + and put the cathode of the diode to the
            HV output. This is for normal positive polarity HV.

            I don't know if a single HV diode or string will hold up but it would be good
            enough to test to see if there is plasma at the plug. There is no reason it
            shouldn't be. That is all these homemade circuits are - cdi with the diodes.

            You could have mutliple diode strings going from the coil primary to each
            plug for actually running an engine.

            Greg, anyone, any comments on this?
            Sincerely,
            Aaron Murakami

            Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
            Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
            RPX & MWO http://vril.io

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Aaron View Post
              Dingo,

              I haven't tried an off the shelf cdi with diode.

              Basically, I'd just hook up a cdi and to test it, put a diode with the anode
              on the ignition coil primary + and put the cathode of the diode to the
              HV output. This is for normal positive polarity HV.

              I don't know if a single HV diode or string will hold up but it would be good
              enough to test to see if there is plasma at the plug. There is no reason it
              shouldn't be. That is all these homemade circuits are - cdi with the diodes.

              You could have mutliple diode strings going from the coil primary to each
              plug for actually running an engine.

              Greg, anyone, any comments on this?
              But, the CDI output at plug is much higher than the standard 20K V...isnt it ? (since 200 +V goes into Primary)....so would the microwave diodes hold up to that?
              (dont want to fry good cdi units)

              Comment


              • Thank You

                Originally posted by Aaron View Post
                Fabrication and testing of an enhanced ignition system to reduce cold-start emissions in an ethanol (E85) light-duty truck engine: G.P. Gardiner

                14 mb document including plug modification for plasma with tungsten.

                Information Bridge: DOE Scientific and Technical Information - Sponsored by OSTI
                Aaron,

                Thanks very much for sharing this link!!

                Best Regards,
                Slovenia

                Comment


                • diodes

                  Originally posted by dingo View Post
                  But, the CDI output at plug is much higher than the standard 20K V...isnt it ? (since 200 +V goes into Primary)....so would the microwave diodes hold up to that?
                  (dont want to fry good cdi units)
                  Most of the cdi schematics i've seen have 400v 2-4uf dumping to the primary.

                  I would use strings of diodes made of 6A100's - those are cheap and rugged
                  diodes rated at 6 amps 1000v each. There are others that Greg, etc... can
                  tell you work good. Just to test, just one diode string is needed to be placed
                  as indicated and then manually trigger the cdi. I don't see why it wouldn't
                  work. I have about 3 non-labeled cdi's so I can't look up the specs but
                  I'll try it on them when I have time.
                  Sincerely,
                  Aaron Murakami

                  Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
                  Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
                  RPX & MWO http://vril.io

                  Comment


                  • plasma ignitors

                    Originally posted by Slovenia View Post
                    Aaron,

                    Thanks very much for sharing this link!!

                    Best Regards,
                    Slovenia
                    Your welcome. There aren't too many docs discussing modifications of
                    off the shelf plugs and turning them into tungsten plasma ignitors.
                    Sincerely,
                    Aaron Murakami

                    Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
                    Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
                    RPX & MWO http://vril.io

                    Comment


                    • Aaron, I did such an experiment, using a classic CDI schematic (home made). I added a diodes string from the CDI capacitor to the spark plug. And it did make plasma. The problem that may occur is about connecting the ignition coil. It doesn't work both ways, as I recall.
                      This was only an experiment, and never mounted on car. But I don't see much problems with that.
                      Anyway, you cannot put a second capacitor paralel to the spark plug, as it would have to deal with the HV. You have to put the HV diodes between the cap and the spark plug.
                      dingo, the amount of voltage developed by the ignition coil depends on the lenght of the air gap that has to be jumped. It's about the spark plug gap. If you keep it small enough, you would probably run your car with 10-15kV in the ignition HV circuit. The HV develops only until the voltage is able to jump the gap. After that, the voltage drops.
                      Cheers.
                      Last edited by Kinetix; 04-27-2010, 11:41 AM.
                      Real PEACE from the Prince of Peace: Jesus Christ!

                      Comment


                      • plasma ignition

                        Originally posted by Kinetix View Post
                        Anyway, you cannot put a second capacitor paralel to the spark plug, as it would have to deal with the HV. You have to put the HV diodes between the cap and the spark plug.
                        Glad it worked because it should have.

                        Without special plugs, booster caps probably aren't desirable because
                        they'll kill your plugs quick anyway so for a bare minimum plasma ignition,
                        the 400v 4uf or so cap in the cdi is probably sufficient. I would use Greg's
                        same setup except you'd be using an off the shelf cdi. Not sure if he
                        knows of any issues you might run into with that.

                        You can find surface gap plugs without resistors off the shelf. That is what
                        I would use without having access to the Firestorm replications or otherwise.
                        You could always cut off the ground strap from some non-resistor plugs
                        but I'd rather just buy them that way.
                        Sincerely,
                        Aaron Murakami

                        Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
                        Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
                        RPX & MWO http://vril.io

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Kinetix View Post
                          Aaron, I did such an experiment, using a classic CDI schematic (home made). I added a diodes string from the CDI capacitor to the spark plug. And it did make plasma. The problem that may occur is about connecting the ignition coil. It doesn't work both ways, as I recall.

                          dingo, the amount of voltage developed by the ignition coil depends on the lenght of the air gap that has to be jumped. It's about the spark plug gap. If you keep it small enough, you would probably run your car with 10-15kV in the ignition HV circuit. The HV develops only until the voltage is able to jump the gap. After that, the voltage drops.
                          Cheers.
                          ok, so you cant use the CDI for both voltages simultaneously ? so CDI for LV and alternate ignition system for HV ?

                          Comment


                          • lv and hv from same cap

                            The cap in the cdi is the source of input to the primary of the coil
                            for the HV, but with the diode setup, it is also the LV source at the
                            same time.
                            Sincerely,
                            Aaron Murakami

                            Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
                            Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
                            RPX & MWO http://vril.io

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Aaron View Post
                              The cap in the cdi is the source of input to the primary of the coil
                              for the HV, but with the diode setup, it is also the LV source at the
                              same time.
                              I could not get it to work this way....at least on my CDI. LV and HV, individually, are there, but simultaneously, it produces 'nada' or at best, a very faint and weak spark.

                              Comment


                              • @Dingo

                                Dingo, can you post a diagram or schematic of your setup?
                                Sincerely,
                                Aaron Murakami

                                Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
                                Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
                                RPX & MWO http://vril.io

                                Comment

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