If the Seven Wonders of the World was updated for the 21 st century, the
Wartsila-Sulzer RTA96-C turbocharged two-stroke diesel engine could be a
contender. If you are a student of the internal combustion engine in
all its wonderous configurations, then feast your eyes on this set of
numbers which outline the truly astounding engineering feat. It is the
most powerful and most efficient engine in the world today.
CONSTRUCTION:
Designed to provide the motive force for a variety of supertankers
and container ships, it comes in 6 cylinder in-line through to a
whopping 14 cylinder version. The cylinder bore is 38 inches and the
stroke is just over 98 inches. Each cylinder displaces 111,143 cubic
inches (1820 litres) and produces 7780 horsepower. Total displacement
comes out to 1,556,002 cubic inches (25,480 litres) for the 14-cylinder
version.
At a length of 89 feet and a height of 44 feet, the total engine weight is 2300 tons - the crankshaft alone weighs 300 tons.
MAXIMUM POWER:
The RTA96C-14 can achieve a maximum power output of 108,920 hp at 102
rpm and astonishingly, at maximum economy the engine exceeds 50%
thermal efficiency. That means, more than 50% of the energy in the fuel
is converted to motion. Its Brake Specific Fuel Consumption (BSFC) at
maximum power is 0.278 lbs/hp/hr.
Ship owners like a single engine/single propeller design and the new
generation of larger container ships needed a bigger engine to propel
them.While engine cylinder configurations for large-scale container
liners have been discussed in the magnitude of 14, 16 and 18 cylinders,
the 14-cylinder in-line low-speed engine is the first to be offered by
any engine designer.
Ship owners prefer single engine/single propeller designs and the new
generation of larger container ships (or post-Panamax) called for a
bigger engine to propel them.
The RTA96C-14 turbocharged two-stroke diesel engine is produced by
Swiss company Wartsila-Sulzer and is the largest and most powerful
diesel engine in the world today.
The peak capabilities of the 14-cylinder RTA96C engine now exceed 80
MW, making it adequate for a single-screw Post-Panamax container liner,
which is as large as container liners will get considering their greater
cost-effectiveness.
Sulzer have also managed to increase cylinder output since they began
first operation in 1997, due to the maintenance experience accumulated
with the large number of RTA96C engines currently in service. The new kW
rating of the new engine achieves a power output of 68,640 kW, a four
percent increase on the initial RTA96C.
OTHER SPECIFICATIONS:
Despite the large amounts of power produced by these engines,
surprisingly low wear rates have been achieved. Diametral cylinder liner
wear is in the order of only about 0.03 mm/1000 hours.
This low cylinder wear is possibly attributed to a connecting rod
that attaches to a "crosshead" which rides in guide channels, a
fundamental difference to most automotive engines where the top of the
connecting rod is attached directly to the piston. Instead, in this
engine the top of the connecting rod attaches to a "crosshead" and a
long piston rod then connects the crosshead to the piston. This lowers
the sideways forces produced by the connecting rod and is absorbed by
the crosshead and not by the piston. Sideways forces are what makes the
cylinders in an auto engine become oval-shaped over time.
Fuel consumption at maximum economy is 0.260 lbs/hp/hour.
Comparatively, most automotive and small aircraft engines can only
achieve BSFC figures in the 0.40-0.60 lbs/hp/hr range and 25-30% thermal
efficiency range.
THE HISTORY:
The design and development of the RTA96C was close collaboration with
the companies involved in the early stages of the first commercial
project: the owner and operator P&O Nedlloyd BV, the ship designer
and builder Ishikawajima Harima Heavy Industries Co Ltd (IHI), and the
enginebuilder Diesel United Ltd.
The project began in March 1997 when the first engine, an 11-cylinder
unit, was started on the test bed of Diesel United Ltd, Aioi.
Since then a total of 86 RT96C engines with eight, nine, ten, 11 and
12 cylinders in-line are in service or on order, 25 of these currently
in service.
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