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Technical Paper

The Intake and Exhaust Pipe Effect on Rotary Engine Performance

2013-10-15
2013-32-9161
This article is to investigate the inlet and exit pipe effect on a rotary engine performance. A 1-dimensional, three-cylinder reciprocating engine model was adopted to simulate the operation of a rotary engine with three separate chambers. The chamber volume variation in this model was identical to a real rotary engine. The test data of the real rotary engine were used as a benchmark test for this model. Various parameters are then studied, including pipe length, pipe diameters, and pipe shape with convergent/divergent angles. In the performance analysis, the results showed that the averaged performance data (BSFC, brake work, brake torque, pressure distribution) was within 5 % in tolerance. The results of pipe length variation showed that in a range of short inlet pipe brought higher power (8.4 %). On the contrary, the exhaust pipe had a better work output over a certain length (10%). With a shorter inlet pipe and a longer exhaust pipe, the work output makes about 14.3% higher.
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