Hurricane
Well-Known Member
So, I am in a restaurant in SC and a friend (yachtie) would like to know how much air is consumed when JWs engines are burning 360 litres per hour of diesel.
Assuming only complete combustion and other simplifications defining "consumed" which include ignoring that engine design aims to supply more air than is needed and the effect of volume of beer consumed on the propagation of schoolboy errors...
Average chemical composition C12H24 and density of 900g/L therefore 5.357 mol/L
1mol carbon requires 2 mol oxygen to burn so the carbon in 1Lof diesel requires 12x2x5.357mol
1mol hydrogen requires 1/2 mol oxygen to burn so the carbon in 1L requires 24x0.5x5.357mol
Total number of moles of oxygen required to burn 1L diesel = 128.57 + 64.28 = 192moles
Vol of 1 mol = 0.024465 m3/mol at 25 °C.
Volume of 192 moles of oxygen as O2 gas = 192/2X .024465 =2.35 cubic metres
At 21% oxygen in air, this converts to 11.234 M3 per L diesel
Or 360X11.234M3 of air for 360L =4044M3 of air
But that makes a crucial difference in diesel engines, I reckon.Assuming only complete combustion and other simplifications defining "consumed" which include ignoring that engine design aims to supply more air than is needed
Yup, but if you tell it that way it sounds like it's the air volume that changes, while it's actually the quantity of fuel squeezed in which is "load-driven", not the air - aside from minor differences due to a bit lower/higher boost pressure.The problem using that standard stoichiometric air / fuel ratio of diesel is around 14,6; is that marine diesel engines are not running under stoichiometric conditions normally.
Which Baddox assumed ., and Mapish M and myself realised .
Typical operating ranges of marine diesel engines spread between an air/fuel ratio of 18 and up to 70, depending on the load .
Not enough info .
You can’t just work on the swept vol x rpm because the air density changes with the turbo / intercoolers.
Even if you work out the Hp roughy from the 360 L/h because you don’t know the load you can’t pin it down .The fuel air vol ratio depends on the load .
You could retro fit a MAF - mass airflow meter passively and find out in Kg,s how much air is gobbled .
Yup, but if you tell it that way it sounds like it's the air volume that changes, while it's actually the quantity of fuel squeezed in which is "load-driven", not the air - aside from minor differences due to a bit lower/higher boost pressure.
In other words, if Hurric would tell us the rpm, displacement and boost pressure, we could calculate the volume of air sucked, irrespective of load and fuel burn.
@ Bouba: I see your point, but aside from not having a clue about how to make the calculation that you suggest, I don't think that's what Hurricane friend was curious about.
Btw M, being him/her a yattie, you might consider replying that the air needed by your engines is still irrelevant, when compared to the volume of air that the wind must blow around in order to move a sailboat...![]()
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M, fwiw, following my previous train of thought, my guesstimate is 4,300 cubic meters/hour.So, I thought I would ask.
Well assuming bus = 11m length, 3m width, 4.5m height bus volume ~148 cubic meters so taking MapisM's 4300 we have 29 Bus volumes.Is it possible you can give the units in football pitch size or double decker bus quantities please.
Is it possible you can give the units in football pitch size or double decker bus quantities please.
M, fwiw, following my previous train of thought, my guesstimate is 4,300 cubic meters/hour.
Which is surprisingly similar to Baddox estimate, considering that it's based on a totally different calculation, i.e.:
17.9*2*2*(2000/2)*60=4,296,000, whereas:
displacement in liters*number of engines*boost pressure*(rpm/2)*minutes.
Happy to learn anything I might be missing, though!