Hesselman engine

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Hesselman engine
Tidaholm Hesselman engine undergoing refurbishment.
ClassificationInternal combustion engine
ApplicationGas compressors, powerboats, pumps, railcars, trucks
Fuel sourceDiesel or various heavy fuel oils
InventorJonas Hesselman
Invented1925 (100 years ago) (1925)

The Hesselman engine is a hybrid between a petrol engine and a diesel engine. It was designed and introduced in 1925 by Swedish engineer Jonas Hesselman.[1]

In a Hesselman engine, fuel is not injected during the suction stroke along with the air, as would be the case in a conventional Otto cycle engine, but is instead injected during the compression stroke slightly ahead of the spark.[2] Hesselman engines typically have lower efficiencies than diesel engines but can run on the same fuels without needing to sustain high compression ratios, and therefore could be made smaller, lighter and cheaper.[3][4]

Most Hesselman engines were built during the 1930s and 1940s by firms in Sweden and the United States for use in both heavy vehicles and stationary industrial applications.[1][4]

During the engine's operating cycle, air is first drawn into the cylinder through an intake valve and given a rotary motion as a result of its tangential direction of entry. Air is compressed on the "up" stroke of the piston without stopping its rotary motion. At about 50 degrees before top dead-center, fuel is injected toward the spark plug from the opposite side of the combustion chamber. The rotary movement of the air mixes the air and fuel while carrying the mixture past the spark plug. The spark occurs at about 15 degrees before top dead-center after which the engine completes its power and exhaust strokes and the cycle began again. Timing for the start of fuel injection and spark are fixed. Throttling of the engine is achieved by linked variation of air intake volume and duration of fuel injection.[3]

In practice Hesselman engines had efficiencies higher than contemporary carburetor spark ignition engines but lower than diesel engines. The combination of low-ratio, air-only compression and spark plug ignition allowed Hesselman engines to run on fuel oil, kerosene, petrol, coal derived tar-oils or alcohol[1] although most ultimately ran on conventional diesel fuels.[4] It was common to start Hesselman engines using petrol from a small auxiliary tank before switching over to cheaper diesel fuel from the main fuel tank.[4][5]

History

See also

References

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