Mean effective pressure

The mean effective pressure is a quantity relating to the operation of a reciprocating engine and is a valuable measure of an engine's capacity to do work that is independent of engine displacement.[1] When quoted as an indicated mean effective pressure or IMEP (defined below), it may be thought of as the average pressure acting on a piston during the different portions of its cycle.

Derivation

Let,

W = work per cycle in joule
P = power output in watt
p_{me} = mean effective pressure in pascal
V_d = displacement volume in cubic metre
n_c = number of revolutions per power stroke (for a 4-stroke engine n_c =2)
N = number of revolutions per second
T = torque in newton-metre

The power produced by the engine is equal to the work done per operating cycle times the number of operating cycles per second. If N is the number of revolutions per second, and n_c is the number of revolutions per cycle, the number of cycles per second is just their ratio. We can write


W = {P n_c \over N}

By definition:


W = p_{me}  V_d

so that


p_{me} = {P n_c \over V_d N}

Since the torque T is related to the angular speed (which is just N 2 π) and power produced by


P = T N {2 \pi}

Then the equation for mep in terms of torque becomes,


p_{me} = {T n_c \over V_d} {2 \pi}

Notice that speed has dropped out of the equation and the only variables are the torque and displacement volume. Since the range of maximum brake mean effective pressures for good engine designs is well established, we now have an engine displacement independent measure of the torque producing capacity of an engine design (a specific torque of sorts). This is useful for comparing engines of different displacements. Mean effective pressure is also useful for initial design calculations; that is, given a torque, we can use standard mep values to estimate the required engine displacement. However, it is important to remember that mean effective pressure does not reflect the actual pressures inside an individual combustion chamber—although the two are certainly related—and serves only as a convenient measure of performance.

Brake Mean Effective Pressure or bmep is calculated from measured dynamometer torque. Net indicated mean effective pressure or imepn is calculated using the indicated power; i.e., the pressure volume integral in the work per cycle equation. Sometimes the term fmep (friction mean effective pressure) is used as an indicator of the mean effective pressure lost to friction (or friction torque) and is just the difference between imepn and bmep

Types of mean effective pressures

Mean effective pressure (MEP) is defined by the location measurement and method of calculation, some commonly used MEPs are given here.

BMEP typical values

For example, a four-stroke motor producing 160 N·m from 2 litres of displacement has a bmep of (4π)(160 N·m)/(0.002 m³) = 1,005,000 N/m2 =1,005 kPa (10.05 bar). If the same engine produces 76 kW at 5400 rpm (90 Hz), its torque is 134 N·m and its bmep is 8.42 bar (842 kPa). As piston engines always have their maximum torque at a lower rotating speed than the maximum output, the BMEP is lower at full power.

See also

Notes and references

  1. Heywood (1988), page 50.
  2. Heywood, page 50.
  3. Heywood, page 50.
  4. Heywood, page 50.
  5. Drive. "The 1140 hp Heart of a Hypercar - Inside Koenigsegg". Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  6. RINA. "Wärtsilä sets new benchmark in four-stroke design".
  7. Wärtsilä Corporation. "Wärtsilä 31".

External links

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