1. Definition of Air Standard Cycle
An air standard cycle is an idealized thermodynamic cycle used to analyze the performance of internal combustion engines. In this concept, air is assumed to be the working fluid, and its behavior is analyzed using simplified assumptions to make engine analysis easy and theoretical.
Air standard cycles do not represent actual engine operation, but they provide a basis for comparison, performance analysis, and understanding of real engines.
2. Purpose of Air Standard Cycle Analysis
The air standard cycle is used to:
- Simplify the complex working of I.C. engines
- Study engine performance theoretically
- Compare different engine cycles
- Calculate thermal efficiency
- Understand effects of compression ratio and heat addition
3. Assumptions of Air Standard Cycle
To simplify analysis, the following assumptions are made:
- Air is the working substance throughout the cycle
- Air behaves as an ideal gas
- The cycle is a closed cycle
- Combustion process is replaced by heat addition
- Exhaust process is replaced by heat rejection
- All processes are internally reversible
- Specific heats of air are constant
- No friction or mechanical losses
Table of Contents
4. Types of Air Standard Cycles
Based on the method of heat addition, air standard cycles are classified as:
- Otto Cycle
- Diesel Cycle
- Dual (Mixed) Cycle
- Brayton Cycle (Gas turbine)
5. Otto Cycle (Air Standard Otto Cycle)
5.1 Definition
The Otto cycle is the ideal cycle for spark ignition (petrol) engines, where heat is added at constant volume.
5.2 Processes of Otto Cycle
The Otto cycle consists of four processes:
1โ2: Isentropic Compression
- Air is compressed adiabatically
- Pressure and temperature increase
2โ3: Constant Volume Heat Addition
- Heat is added at constant volume
- Pressure and temperature rise sharply
3โ4: Isentropic Expansion (Power Stroke)
- Air expands adiabatically
- Work output is produced
4โ1: Constant Volume Heat Rejection
Heat is rejected to surroundings
5.3 Thermal Efficiency of Otto Cycle
Where:
- r = compression ratio
- ฮณ = ratio of specific heats
5.4 Important Observations
- Efficiency depends only on compression ratio
- Higher compression ratio โ higher efficiency
6. Diesel Cycle (Air Standard Diesel Cycle)
6.1 Definition
The Diesel cycle is the ideal cycle for compression ignition (diesel) engines, where heat is added at constant pressure.
6.2 Processes of Diesel Cycle
Process 1โ2: Isentropic Compression
- Air is compressed adiabatically and reversibly
- Both pressure and temperature increase
- No heat transfer takes place
- Volume decreases from maximum to minimum
Process 2โ3: Constant Pressure Heat Addition
- Fuel is injected into the highly compressed air
- Combustion occurs while pressure remains constant
- Volume increases as heat is added
- Temperature rises further
Process 3โ4: Isentropic Expansion (Power Stroke)
- High-pressure gases expand adiabatically
- Work is produced
- Pressure and temperature drop
- Volume increases to maximum
Process 4โ1: Constant Volume Heat Rejection
- Heat is rejected at constant volume
- Pressure and temperature decrease
- The system returns to initial state
6.3 Cut-off Ratio
6.4 Thermal Efficiency of Diesel Cycle
6.5 Observations
- Efficiency depends on compression ratio and cut-off ratio
- Higher cut-off ratio reduces efficiency
7. Dual Cycle (Mixed Cycle)
7.1 Definition
The Dual cycle combines features of both Otto and Diesel cycles. Heat is added:
- Partly at constant volume
- Partly at constant pressure
This cycle represents modern high-speed diesel engines more accurately.
7.2 Processes of Dual Cycle
- Isentropic compression
- Constant volume heat addition
- Constant pressure heat addition
- Isentropic expansion
- Constant volume heat rejection
8. Comparison of Air Standard Cycles
| Feature | Otto Cycle | Diesel Cycle | Dual Cycle |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heat addition | Constant volume | Constant pressure | Both |
| Engine type | Petrol | Diesel | Modern diesel |
| Efficiency (same r) | Highest | Lowest | Intermediate |
| Compression ratio | Lower | Higher | High |
9. Air Standard Efficiency
Air standard efficiency is the thermal efficiency calculated under air standard assumptions. It represents the maximum possible efficiency of an engine cycle.
10. Limitations of Air Standard Cycle
- Does not consider real combustion
- Ignores heat losses
- Assumes constant specific heats
- No friction or pumping losses
- Not applicable for exact real engine performance
11. Significance of Air Standard Cycle
- Helps understand engine thermodynamics
- Useful for academic analysis
- Basis for real engine comparison
- Simplifies numerical problem solving