Turbo exhaust manifolds can be pulse, constant pressure, or pulse converter systems.
Pulse and pulse converter systems try to use the higher available energy (relative to a constant pressure manifold) when the exhaust valve opens.
Pulse systems have no more than 3 cylinders per turbine inlet.
Pulse converter systems are used for 4, 8 and 16 cylinder engines because pulse systems are difficult with these numbers of cylinders.
One pulse converter is required for a 4 cylinder engine. 2 converters for an 8 cyl engines, and 4 converters for 16 cyls. There would be one turbine entry at each converter.
They were developed to produce steadier and more efficient flow at the turbine than pulse systems. Turbine efficiency is improved at the expense of some performance at low speeds and loads.
By using a pulse converter to connect 4 cylinders to a single turbine inlet, the low efficiency period between exhaust pulses of a 2 cylinder per turbine inlet pulse system is overcome.
The critical parts of the pulse converter are the nozzles that accelerate the gas as it enters the junction at the turbine inlet. This minimises pressure pulse transmission from one branch to the other branch, avoiding a pulse from one cylinder adversely affecting the scavenge process of another.
In its simplest form (using the 4BD1-T firing order), No's 1 and 4 ports are connected, as are No's 2 and 3, which then merge at a pulse converter at the turbine inlet.
Alternatively multiple entry pulse converters (patented), can be used with 3 or 4 manifold branches joining in the pulse converter at a single entry turbine.
The following diagrams were taken from the Diesel Engine Reference Book. The recommendations for the pulse converter include:
- cross section area of pipe should be 0.5 to 1.0 x area of turbine throat
- cross section area of nozzle should be 0.65 to 0.85 x area of pipe
Edit: The graph is from an 8 cyl engine, comparing a pulse system (left) to pulse converter system (right).
The continuous line with large peaks is the pressure pulse in exhaust branch of No 1 cylinder as the crank angle changes.
The short dashed line is pressure at the turbine inlet. Note that with the pulse system it closely follows the pressure in the exhaust branch and has high peaks and low dips. It is more uniform with the pulse converter.
The long dashed (difficult to distinguish) line is the boost pressure. About 2.3 bar for the pulse system and about 2.5 bar for the pulse converter system.
The heavy bars along the bottom are inlet and exhaust valve periods for No 1 cyl.
Bookmarks