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Pistonless rotary engine

 

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Pistonless rotary engine



 
 
A pistonless rotary engine is an internal combustion engine
Internal combustion engine

The internal combustion engine is an engine in which the combustion of a fuel occurs in a combustion chamber inside and integral to the engine. In an internal combustion engine it is always the expansion of the high temperature and pressure gases that are produced by the combustion which apply force to the movable component of the engine, such as...
 that does not use piston
Piston

A piston is a component of reciprocating engines, pumps and gas compressors. It is located in a Cylinder and is made gas-tight by piston rings....
s in the way a reciprocating engine
Reciprocating engine

A reciprocating engine, also often known as a piston engine, is a heat engine that uses one or more Reciprocating motion pistons to convert pressure into a Circular motion....
 does, but instead uses one or more rotors, sometimes called rotary pistons. An example of a pistonless rotary engine is the Wankel engine
Wankel engine

The Wankel engine is a type of internal combustion engine which uses a rotary combustion engine to convert pressure into a rotating motion instead of using reciprocating piston engine....
.

The term rotary combustion engine has been suggested as an alternative name for these engines to distinguish them from the obsolete aircraft engine
Aircraft engine

An aircraft engine is a propulsion system for an aircraft. Aircraft engines are almost always either lightweight piston engines or gas turbines....
s also known as rotary engine
Rotary engine

The 'rotary engine' was an early type of internal-combustion engine in which the crankshaft remained stationary and the entire cylinder block rotated around it....
s
. However both continue to be called rotary engines and only the context determines which type is meant.






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Encyclopedia


A pistonless rotary engine is an internal combustion engine
Internal combustion engine

The internal combustion engine is an engine in which the combustion of a fuel occurs in a combustion chamber inside and integral to the engine. In an internal combustion engine it is always the expansion of the high temperature and pressure gases that are produced by the combustion which apply force to the movable component of the engine, such as...
 that does not use piston
Piston

A piston is a component of reciprocating engines, pumps and gas compressors. It is located in a Cylinder and is made gas-tight by piston rings....
s in the way a reciprocating engine
Reciprocating engine

A reciprocating engine, also often known as a piston engine, is a heat engine that uses one or more Reciprocating motion pistons to convert pressure into a Circular motion....
 does, but instead uses one or more rotors, sometimes called rotary pistons. An example of a pistonless rotary engine is the Wankel engine
Wankel engine

The Wankel engine is a type of internal combustion engine which uses a rotary combustion engine to convert pressure into a rotating motion instead of using reciprocating piston engine....
.

The term rotary combustion engine has been suggested as an alternative name for these engines to distinguish them from the obsolete aircraft engine
Aircraft engine

An aircraft engine is a propulsion system for an aircraft. Aircraft engines are almost always either lightweight piston engines or gas turbines....
s also known as rotary engine
Rotary engine

The 'rotary engine' was an early type of internal-combustion engine in which the crankshaft remained stationary and the entire cylinder block rotated around it....
s
. However both continue to be called rotary engines and only the context determines which type is meant. In particular, the only commercial producer of (pistonless) automobile rotary engines , Mazda
Mazda

is a Japanese automaker based in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. It is part owned by the Ford Motor Company.During 2007, Mazda produced almost 1.3 million vehicles for global sales....
, consistently refers to its Wankel engines
Mazda Wankel engine

All Mazda Wankel engine are essentially a single family ? they all derive from the first Felix Wankel experiments in the early 1960s. Over the years, displacement has been increased , and turbocharging has been added to great effect....
 as rotary engines. O.S. Engines, who produce a Wankel model airplane engine, refer to it as a wankel rotary engine.

Pistonless rotary engines

The basic concept of a (pistonless) rotary engine avoids the reciprocating motion of the piston with its inherent vibration
Vibration

Vibration refers to mechanical oscillations about an equilibrium point. The oscillations may be periodic function such as the motion of a pendulum or random such as the movement of a tire on a gravel road....
 and rotational-speed-related mechanical stress
Stress (physics)

In continuum mechanics, stress is a measure of the average amount of force exerted per unit area. It is a measure of the intensity of the total internal forces acting within a body across imaginary internal surfaces, as a reaction to external applied forces and body forces....
. the Wankel engine is the only successful pistonless rotary engine, but many similar concepts have been proposed and are under various stages of development. Examples of rotary engines include:

Production stage:
  • The Wankel engine
    Wankel engine

    The Wankel engine is a type of internal combustion engine which uses a rotary combustion engine to convert pressure into a rotating motion instead of using reciprocating piston engine....
Development stage:
  • The Sarich orbital engine
    Orbital engine

    The Sarich orbital engine is a type of internal combustion engine, featuring rotary rather than reciprocating motion of its internal parts. It differs from the conceptually similar Wankel engine by using a shaped rotor that rolls around the interior of the engine, rather than having a trilobular rotor that spins "in place"....
  • The RKM engine
    RKM engine

    The Rotary Piston Machine, or in its German originalRotationskolbenmaschine is a new formof machine. It can be used either to transform pressure into...
     (RotationsKolbenMaschinen)
  • The Trochilic engine
  • The Engineair engine
Conceptual stage:
  • The quasiturbine
    Quasiturbine

    The Quasiturbine or Qurbine engine is a proposed pistonless rotary engine using a rhomboidal Rotor whose sides are hinged at the vertices....
  • The Liquidpiston
    Liquidpiston

    The LiquidPiston engine is a rotary engine, which operates on the High Efficiency Hybrid Cycle, . This cycle consists of compressing air to a very high ratio, as is typical in the Diesel cycle....
     engine
  • The Gerotor
    Gerotor

    A gerotor is a positive displacement pumping unit. The name gerotor is derived from "Generated Rotor ". A gerotor unit consists of an inner and outer rotor....
     engine


Advantages

All such engines have the potential to improve on the piston engine in the areas of:
  • Higher power-to-weight ratio
    Power-to-weight ratio

    Power-to-weight ratio is a calculation commonly applied to engines and mobile power sources to enable the comparison of one unit or design to another....
    s.
  • Mechanical simplicity.
  • Less vibration.
  • Sealing system has no revolutions-limit; piston rings fail after the engine's revolutions-limit.


While typically larger than the piston of an engine of corresponding capacity, a rotor may perform many strokes
Stroke (disambiguation)

Stroke may be:* Stroke, a cerebral accident, when blood supply to a part of the brain is suddenly interrupted** Sunstroke, also called heatstroke...
 per revolution. The Wankel produces twelve strokes per revolution of the rotor (four strokes per chamber times three chambers) (although the spindle rotates three times faster than the rotor or three times over the twelve strokes), as opposed to two strokes for each crankshaft rotation of a single-cylinder single acting piston engine, or four strokes for a double-acting cylinder such as found in some steam engine
Steam engine

File:Steam-powered fire engine.jpgA steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid.Steam engines have a long history, going back at least 2000 years....
s. The quasiturbine and MYT engine deliver sixteen strokes for every rotor (and spindle) revolution.

Disadvantages

Although in two dimensions the seal system of a Wankel looks to be even simpler than that of a corresponding multi-cylinder piston engine, in three dimensions the reverse is the case. As well as the rotor apex seals evident in the conceptual diagram, the rotor must also seal against the chamber ends.

Piston ring
Piston ring

A piston ring is an open-ended ring that fits into a groove on the outer diameter of a piston in a reciprocating engine such as an internal combustion engine or steam engine....
s are not perfect seals. Each has a gap in fact to allow for expansion. Moreover the sealing at the Wankel apexes is less critical, as leakage is between adjacent chambers on adjacent strokes of the cycle, rather than to the crankcase. However, the less effective sealing of the Wankel is one factor reducing its efficiency, and confining its success mainly to applications such as racing engines and sports vehicles where neither efficiency nor long engine life are major considerations. In earlier models, the Wankel engines should never be started and run unless the engine has reached operating temperature; most such instances of jammed engines occur when a car is started and moved a few yards, e.g. from a garage to a driveway. In these situations it is better to push the car and not start the engine. This is due to the engine flooding
Flooded engine

A flooded engine is an internal combustion engine that has been fed an excessively rich air-fuel mixture that cannot be ignited. This is caused by the mixture exceeding the upper explosive limit for the particular fuel....
 with fuel, which can lead to hydrolock
Hydrolock

Hydrolock is a condition of an internal combustion engine in which an incompressible liquid has been introduced into its cylinder, resulting in the immobilization of the engine's pistons....
 of the motor. This "flooding" is caused by the excess amount of fuel injected into the engine in its "cold" running circuit. The flooding issue has been largely fixed through changes in the ECU programming and a faster starter motor.

50% longer stroke duration than a piston engine (Wankel engine).

The Quasiturbine has similar disadvantages with its concave combustion chamber, and in the AC design the sharp angles of the carriers hamper the propagation of the flame front, leading to incomplete combustion. The stroke duration is too short for a complete combustion.

Comparisons

The simplest design, either proposed or in use, is the Wankel
Wankel engine

The Wankel engine is a type of internal combustion engine which uses a rotary combustion engine to convert pressure into a rotating motion instead of using reciprocating piston engine....
. Its only moving parts
Moving parts

Moving parts are the moving mechanical components of a device or machine, particularly those that undergo continuous or frequent motion, as opposed to stationary components such as a supporting frame or electronic parts....
 are a three-sided rotor turning on an eccentric shaft; There is neither camshaft nor valves. The rotor is not fixed to the eccentric shaft, but turns it by means of an internal gear on the inside of the rotor engaging a smaller conventional gear on the side plate. The rotor is positively located by the eccentric shaft and by the geometry of the rotor and engine chamber. A Wankel engine fires once for every revolution of the eccentric shaft, so a single rotor is in some ways equivalent to a two-cylinder four stroke reciprocating engine
Reciprocating engine

A reciprocating engine, also often known as a piston engine, is a heat engine that uses one or more Reciprocating motion pistons to convert pressure into a Circular motion....
. The Wankel engine can be balanced perfectly, with counterweights.

In the most popular Mazda
Mazda

is a Japanese automaker based in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. It is part owned by the Ford Motor Company.During 2007, Mazda produced almost 1.3 million vehicles for global sales....
 family of engines, the 13B
Mazda Wankel engine

All Mazda Wankel engine are essentially a single family ? they all derive from the first Felix Wankel experiments in the early 1960s. Over the years, displacement has been increased , and turbocharging has been added to great effect....
, this consists of two rotors displacing 654 cc (cubic centimeters) per each rotor face, a total of 1308 cc or 1.3 liters). A Wankel engine has no empty stroke like a reciprocating four stroke piston engine, therefore a Wankel engine needs only half the volume of a reciprocating four stroke engine.

There are various methods of calculating the engine displacement of a Wankel; the Japanese regulations calculating displacements for engine ratings calculate on the basis of the volume displacement of one rotor face only. This is widely accepted as the standard method of calculating the displacement of a rotary, however comparing a piston engine to a Wankel rotary using this displacement convention is flawed and results in large imbalances in specific output
List of automotive superlatives

This page lists Wiktionary:superlatives of the automobile industry - that is, the smallest, largest, fastest, lightest, best-selling, and other such topics....
 in favor of the Wankel motor. Many believe this is for marketing purposes on Mazda's part.

Technically speaking a twin rotor Wankel rotary displacing 654cc per combustion chamber (such as the Mazda 13B
Mazda Wankel engine

All Mazda Wankel engine are essentially a single family ? they all derive from the first Felix Wankel experiments in the early 1960s. Over the years, displacement has been increased , and turbocharging has been added to great effect....
) has a maximum displacement of 3924cc (3.9 liters). This is because there are three possible combustion chambers per rotor, each displacing 654cc at full expansion. 654cc per face, three faces per rotor (1962cc/2 liters), two rotors per engine (3924cc/3.9 liters). Other notable rotaries such as the '2 liter' 3-rotor Mazda 20b
Mazda Wankel engine

All Mazda Wankel engine are essentially a single family ? they all derive from the first Felix Wankel experiments in the early 1960s. Over the years, displacement has been increased , and turbocharging has been added to great effect....
 in the Eunos Cosmo
Mazda Cosmo

There have been four generations of Mazda automobiles which went by the name of Cosmo, although they are not all particularly related. All were GT cars, with the first proving a successful launch for the Mazda Wankel engine and acting as a halo vehicle for the new Mazda brand....
 (total displacement: 5886cc/5.9 liters) and '2.6 liter' 4-rotor Mazda R26b from the Le Mans winning 787b (total displacement: 7848cc/7.8 liters) have maximum displacement calculated in the same way, taking combustion chamber volume and multiplying by the total number of combustion chambers per engine. Comparing rotaries to piston engines using this method is futile as the Wankel's subjects its full displacement to a power stroke after three full rotations of the eccentric shaft. This means comparing a hypothetical 3.9 liter piston engine to a '1.3 liter' Wankel rotary using this displacement calculation method will result in the the piston engine's theoretical specific output being approximately 50% higher than the Wankel rotary because the piston engine will displace its 3.9 liters through a power stroke one revolution (50%) sooner than the Wankel rotary.

For comparison purposes between a Wankel Rotary engine and a piston engine, displacement (and thus power output) can more accurately be compared on a displacement per revolution (of the eccentric shaft) basis. This dictates that a two rotor Wankel displacing 654cc per face will have a displacement of 1.3 liters per every rotation of the eccentric shaft(only two total faces, one face per rotor going through a full power stroke) and 2.6 liters after two revolutions (four total faces, two faces per rotor going through a full power stroke). This is directly comparable to a 2.6 liter piston engine with an even number of cylinders in a conventional firing order which will also displace 1.3 liters through its power stroke after one revolution of the crankshaft, and 2.6 liters through its power strokes after two revolutions of the crankshaft. Measuring a Wankel rotary engine in this way more accurately explains its specific output numbers, as the volume of its air fuel mixture put through a power stroke per revolution is directly responsible for torque and thus horsepower produced.

The Sarich orbital engine
Orbital engine

The Sarich orbital engine is a type of internal combustion engine, featuring rotary rather than reciprocating motion of its internal parts. It differs from the conceptually similar Wankel engine by using a shaped rotor that rolls around the interior of the engine, rather than having a trilobular rotor that spins "in place"....
 has a larger number of moving parts than the Wankel. The six-chamber design used for the prototype has, conceptually, eight moving parts within the engine chamber as opposed to two for the Wankel. However it also requires six spark plugs, one per combustion chamber, as opposed to one per rotor for the Wankel (although two are commonly used in practice for performance reasons). The Sarich was developed to the point of being demonstrated running briefly as a bench-test with no load before the design was abandoned.

The Quasiturbine
Quasiturbine

The Quasiturbine or Qurbine engine is a proposed pistonless rotary engine using a rhomboidal Rotor whose sides are hinged at the vertices....
 AC design is more complex still than the Sarich. Even with only two wheels per carriage, there are at least nineteen moving parts within the engine chamber including the shaft and differential, and possibly more depending on the design of the differential. In common with the Wankel, the Quasiturbine only requires a single spark plug. A prototype of the Quasiturbine AC design was constructed and turned by an external engine for 40 hours, but ignition was never achieved.

The Quasiturbine SC design is greatly simplified from the AC, but still has at least seven moving parts within the chamber, including the shaft and again possibly more depending on the design of the differential. The SC design has been demonstrated as a steam and pneumatic engine, but not as an internal combustion engine. Prototype steam engines have run for periods of up to a few hours. Quasiturbine has the disantvantage of a short stroke duration, this limited the maximal revolutions.

The Rand cam engine
Rand cam engine

The RadMax engine, also known as Ram-cam or Rand-cam engine is a pistonless rotary engine produced by Reg/Regi Technologies Inc....
 uses sliding vanes to implement the four stroke cycle. It is primarily being developed by Reg Technology.

The Rotary Atkinson cycle engine has only three moving parts within the chamber and has one power stroke per revolution. However unlike the Wankel which uses the Otto cycle, this engine uses the more efficient Atkinson cycle
Atkinson cycle

The Atkinson-cycle engine is a type of internal combustion engine invented by James Atkinson in 1882. The Atkinson cycle is designed to provide efficiency at the expense of power and is beginning to see use in modern hybrid electric applications....
. Multi fuels can be used including gasoline, diesel and hydrogen.

Trochilics
Trochilics

Trochilics may refer to:* Trochilics the science of rotating mechanical devices.* The array of Trochilic engine ranging from Stirling cycle, internal combustion, to high-pressure gas or steam and with adaptive alterations to gaseous or fluid pumping....
 the science of rotating mechanical devices describes the array of ranging from Stirling cycle, internal combustion, to high-pressure gas or steam and with adaptive alterations to gaseous or fluid pumping. The piston is composed of two mirror image gull wing segments intermeshed and rotating about a common central axis. Varying the relative segment velocities in rotation, forms four variable quadrants. The quadrants are functionally a four-cylinder engine requiring no mechanically driven valves. Each segment is integrally connected to a rotating gear cage that converts the undulating piston motion to a liner rotating output shaft. The segmented piston has a preferred direction of rotation imposed by the mechanically leveraged action of the gear cage. Trochilic engines do not employ compression rings, as conventional engines. This design approach improves efficiency through the reduction of friction losses and reduced engine wear. The air-fuel mix is aspirated, compressed, ignited and burnt between each rotor's forward and back faces as each rotor advances or retreats relative to the other during operation, varying the volume of the chamber continuously. Currently being developed by the Trochilic engine team.

In the MYT engine, the rotary pistons are toroid-sections (curved cylinders sliding inside the toroidal stator) and connected to either of two inner discs. This principle of operation can be traced back to the 1968 Tschudi engine. The main problems of this type of engine is getting a constant rotation on the output shaft from the two oppositely accelerating and decelerating rotors (planetary gears are used on some versions of Trochilic Engines, while the MYT makes use of a more complex connection system using camshafts) and preventing the rotors from turning in the wrong direction. On the other hand, these designs do not suffer from the sealing problems of Wankel engine or Quasiturbine, and use very few moving parts (5 in the simpler model of Trochilic Engine).

The Engineair engine, invented by Angelo Di Petro in Australia in 1999, and developed by Engineair since then, is based on a cylindrical rotary piston. The piston rolls around the cylindrical stator wall cushioned by a thin film of air. Six expansion chambers are created by curved vanes in slots in the stator contacting the surface of the piston (or shaft driver). Air pressure on its outer wall forces the shaft driver to move eccentrically, thereby rotating the motor shaft by means of two rolling elements mounted on the shaft with bearings. Engine speed and torque are simply controlled by throttling air inlet and exhaust via a variable slotted timer mounted on the output shaft. Large torque is instantly available at zero RPM and can be precisely controlled to give soft start and acceleration control. About a dozen moving parts.

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