I know what you mean and can't explain it any better, but trust me when I say, excess oxygen keeps diesel combustion safe, heatwise. It's something I've learned in my quest for tuning diesels, as you add more fuel you get more power and more heat, way more heat! Add more oxygen and the heat reduces.cachaciero wrote:You haven't understood that bit to wellMikeT wrote: Admittedly, I haven't studied the EGR theory but, if it's excess oxygen that cools the diesel combustion, how does displacing it with exhaust gases achieve the same?it's not excess oxygen that cools, it's the reduction of oxygen that cools, less than optimum oxygen means that the combustion is less complete and hence cooler, think of blowing on a fire, you blow the fire burns brighter and hotter because it's getting more oxygen, stop blowing and it still burns but duller and cooler.
From one article I've just read on a study into extending the rpm range of EGR's in diesels....
"It is generally known that there are two reasons to
reduce NOx by EGR. The first of them is the reduction
of combustion temperature. The addition of exhaust
gases to the intake air increases the amount of combus-
tion-accompanying gases (mainly CO2), which in turn
increases the heat capacity and lowers the combustion
temperature. The second effect is the reduction of oxy-
gen concentration in the intake air, which restrains the
generation of NOx."
This suggest cooling is accomplished by an excess of CO2 (mainly), while reducing the oxygen reduces the amount of NOx that can form.