Engine power

Last updated
Engine power
Common symbols
P
SI unit Kilowatt (kW)
In SI base units 1000 kg m 2 s −3
Derivations from
other quantities
P = M·ω
Dimension

Engine power is the power that an engine can develop. It can be expressed in power units, most commonly kilowatt, metric horsepower (often abbreviated PS), or horsepower. In terms of internal combustion engines, the engine power usually describes the rated power, which is a power output that the engine can maintain over a long period of time according to a certain testing method, for example ISO 1585. In general though, an internal combustion engine has a power take-off shaft (the crankshaft), therefore, the rule for shaft power applies to internal combustion engines: Engine power is the product of the engine torque and the crankshaft's angular velocity.

Contents

Definition

Power is the product of torque and angular velocity: [1]

Let:

Power is then:

In internal combustion engines, the crankshaft speed is a more common figure than , so we can use instead, which is equivalent to : [2]

Note that is per Second (s1). If we want to use the common per Minute (min1) instead, we have to divide by 60:

Usage

Numerical value equations

The approximate numerical value equations for engine power from torque and crankshaft speed are: [1] [3] [4]

International unit system (SI)

Let:

  • Power in Kilowatt (kW)
  • Torque in Newton-metre (N·m)
  • Crankshaft speed per Minute (min1)

Then:

Technical unit system (MKS)

  • Power in Metric horsepower (hp, PS)
  • Torque in Kilopondmetre (kp·m)
  • Crankshaft speed per Minute (min1)

Then:

Imperial/U.S. Customary unit system

  • Power in Horsepower (hp, bhp)
  • Torque in Pound-force foot (lbf·ft)
  • Crankshaft speed in Revolutions per Minute (rpm)

Then:

Example

Torque and power diagram of the example diesel engine
Crankshaft speed (1/min)05010015020025030035010001500200025003000350040004500Torque (N·m)Power (kW)Diesel engine power and torque example
See or edit source data.

The power curve (orange) can be derived from the torque curve (blue)
by multiplying with the crankshaft speed and dividing by 9550

A diesel engine produces a torque of 234 N·m at 4200 min1, which is the engine's rated speed.

Let:

Then:

or using the numerical value equation:

The engine's rated power output is 103 kW.

Units

Kilowatt Kilopondmetre per Second Metric horsepower Horsepower Pound-force foot per minute
1 kW (= 1000 kg·m2·s3) =1101.971.361.3444,118
1 kp·m·s1 =0.0098066510.0130.0132433.981
1 PS =0.735498757510.98632,548.56
1 hp =0.745776.041.014133,000
1 lbf·ft·min1 =2.26·1050.00232.99·1053.03·1051

See also

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 Böge 2017. p 233
  2. Fred Schäfer, Richard van Basshuysen 2017. p. 21
  3. Böge 1972. p 154
  4. Kemp 1998. p 259