Hi Friends.
I know the Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) system was designed mainly to reduce harmful emissions, yet many articles claim it also helps suppress detonation (knock). I still don’t fully understand how this works.
The usual explanation is that EGR displaces some of the fresh air with inert exhaust gas, so the ECU injects less fuel. Less fuel plus more inert mass lowers peak combustion temperature, reducing the chance of knock. However, if EGR is active and we want the same power, we naturally open the throttle farther, which increases total fuel flow. How can 50 % throttle with EGR consume less fuel—or run cooler—than, say, 40 % throttle without it? If the engine is doing the same work, shouldn’t it burn roughly the same amount of fuel unless the system is somehow more thermodynamically efficient?
Does EGR actually improve thermal efficiency, and if so, how? And finally, aren’t exhaust gases much hotter than fresh intake air to begin with?
Regards.
I know the Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) system was designed mainly to reduce harmful emissions, yet many articles claim it also helps suppress detonation (knock). I still don’t fully understand how this works.
The usual explanation is that EGR displaces some of the fresh air with inert exhaust gas, so the ECU injects less fuel. Less fuel plus more inert mass lowers peak combustion temperature, reducing the chance of knock. However, if EGR is active and we want the same power, we naturally open the throttle farther, which increases total fuel flow. How can 50 % throttle with EGR consume less fuel—or run cooler—than, say, 40 % throttle without it? If the engine is doing the same work, shouldn’t it burn roughly the same amount of fuel unless the system is somehow more thermodynamically efficient?
Does EGR actually improve thermal efficiency, and if so, how? And finally, aren’t exhaust gases much hotter than fresh intake air to begin with?
Regards.