Two-stroke wankel type rotary engine: A new approach for higher power density

Osman Akin Kutlar*, Fatih Malkaz

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The Wankel engine is a rotary type of four-stroke cycle internal combustion engine. The higher specific power output is one of its strong advantages. In Wankel rotary engine, every eccentric shaft revolution corresponds to one four-stroke cycle, whereas conventional reciprocating engine fulfills four-stroke cycle in two crankshaft revolutions. This means the power stroke frequency is twice that of conventional engines. Theoretically, application of two-stroke cycle on Wankel geometry will duplicate the power stroke frequency. In this research, a single-zone thermodynamic model is developed for studying the performance characteristic of a two-stroke Wankel engine. Two different port timings were adapted from the literature. The results revealed that late opening and early closing port geometry (small opening area) with high supercharging pressure has higher performance at low speed range. However, as the rotor speed increases, the open period of the port area becomes insufficient for the gas exchange, which reduces power performance. Early opening and late closing port geometry (large opening area) with supercharging is more suitable in higher speed range. Port timing and area, charging pressure, and speed are the main factors that characterize output performance. These preliminary results show a potential for increasing power density by applying two-stroke cycle of theWankel engine.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberen12214096
JournalEnergies
Volume12
Issue number21
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 by the authors.

Keywords

  • Internal combustion engine
  • Power density
  • Power stroke density
  • Rotary engine
  • Single-zone model
  • Two-stroke
  • Wankel

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