A basic engine with the addition of a supercharger.
An ordinary four-stroke engine dedicates one stroke to the
process of air intake. There are three steps in this process:
11. The piston moves down.
22. This creates a vacuum.
33. Air at atmospheric pressure is sucked into the
combustion chamber.
Once air is drawn into the engine, it must be combined with fuel
to form the charge -- a packet of potential energy that can be turned into
useful kinetic energy through a chemical reaction known as combustion. The spark plug initiates this chemical
reaction by igniting the charge. As the
fuel undergoes oxidation, a great deal of energy is released. The force of this
explosion, concentrated above the cylinder head, drives the piston down and
creates a reciprocating motion that is eventually transferred to the wheels.
That's the job of the supercharger. Superchargers increase
intake by compressing air above atmospheric pressure, without creating a
vacuum. This forces more air into the engine, providing a "boost."
With the additional air in the boost, more fuel can be added to the charge, and
the power of the engine is increased. Supercharging adds an average of 46
percent more horsepower and 31 percent more torque. In high-altitude situations, where engine performance
deteriorates because the air has low density and pressure, a supercharger
delivers higher-pressure air to the engine so it can operate optimally.
Unlike turbochargers, which use the exhaust gases created by
combustion to power the compressor, superchargers draw their power directly
from the crankshaft. Most are driven by an accessory belt, which wraps around a
pulley that is connected to a drive gear. The drive gear, in turn, rotates the
compressor gear. The rotor of the compressor can come in various designs, but
its job is to draw air in, squeeze the air into a smaller space and discharge
it into the intake manifold.
Pro Charger D1 SC centrifugal supercharger
To pressurize the air, a supercharger must spin rapidly -- more
rapidly than the engine itself. Making the drive gear larger than the
compressor gear causes the compressor to spin faster. Superchargers can spin at
speeds as high as 50,000 to 65,000 rotations per minute (RPM).
A compressor spinning at 50,000 RPM translates to a boost of
about six to nine pounds per square inch (psi). That's six to nine additional
psi over the atmospheric pressure at a particular elevation. Atmospheric
pressure at sea level is 14.7 psi, so a typical boost from a supercharger
places about 50 percent more air into the engine.
As the air is compressed, it gets hotter, which means that it
loses its density and cannot expand as much during the explosion. This means
that it can't create as much power when it's ignited by the spark plug. For a
supercharger to work at peak efficiency, the compressed air exiting the
discharge unit must be cooled before it enters the intake manifold. The
intercooler is responsible for this cooling process. Intercoolers come in two
basic designs: air-to-air intercoolers and air-to-water intercoolers. Both work
just like a radiator, with cooler air or water sent through a system of
pipes or tubes. As the hot air exiting the supercharger encounters the cooler
pipes, it also cools down. The reduction in air temperature increases the
density of the air, which makes for a denser charge entering the combustion
chamber.
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