The diesel engine is a type of
internal combustion engine that was invented by Rudolf Diesel.
He received a patent for the diesel engine in 1892 and the
primary goal was to create an efficient alternative to the
gasoline engine.
Both gasoline engines and
diesel engines work by creating a controlled explosion in a
sealed piston chamber. The small explosion rapidly moves the
piston which in turn rotates the output shaft. In a gasoline
engine, a mixture of fuel and air are injected into the chamber
and then ignited with a spark created by a sparkplug. A diesel
engine, on the other hand, does not rely on a sparkplug to
ignite the mixture. Fuel is forced into the chamber and the high
pressure generates enough heat to ignite the fuel/air mixture.
Some diesel engines rely on a
glow plug to heat the chamber to minimize the amount of pressure
required for the engine to turn. Without such an added heat
source, the pressure required to achieve ignition (especially
when the engine is cold) would be prohibitively high.
Diesel engines require diesel
fuel for the combustion process to function properly. Diesel
fuel is cheaper than regular gasoline because less refining is
required. In addition, diesel engines are more efficient and
therefore diesel cars get better mileage than their gasoline
counterparts.
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