DeereMann
Platinum Member
I think you may be confusing chemical potential energy ( diesel fuel vs gasoline BTU's) with thermal efficiency of an engine. They are 2 different things. Both are very relevant but separate issues of science.
The Eco-boost deserves credit for bringing diesel like low rpm torque with the advantages of a gas design, such as simple emmisions, oil requirements, cold weather etc...
Ram deserves credit for bringing an affordable true diesel to a segment of people who might fancy the idea of having a true diesel with it's low rpm torque. This same group of buyers would not buy a diesel otherwise.
Not much unlike the recent popular explosion of subcompact diesel "tractor" sales to everyone with 1/4 acre grass to mow...
Thanks for comment, DarkBlack. It is true I mixed both subjects - but that was for simplicity's sake because both are relevant here.
There is no question that chemical potential energy of ASTM D975 No. 2 diesel fuel is higher than gasoline, though the difference has become narrower because of ULSD stripping some of the heavy fractions out.
It also is true the compression ignition engine in general has higher thermal efficiency than the spark ignition (otto cycle) engine. That gap has also been narrowed some, not due to turbocharging of SI engines, but due to some of the direct gasoline injection engines that have the ability to cycle between regular stoichiometric (rich burn) operation when loaded, and lean burn at low load. Of course, this requires all the fancy ECM electronics of the FAE diesel engines to do so.
The combination of these two means the diesel engine is still 'X' times more efficient - it burns less fuel per mile at the same loads & conditions.
The peak cylinder pressure of the diesel is almost always higher than that of gasoline. But - this too has narrowed as the FAE HPCR diesels, with piezoelectric fuel injectors, are able to inject up to 5 times a combustion cycled to reduce the peak pressure and 'flatten' the pressure/time curve. Since pressure correlates to temperature, and temperature correlates to NOx pollutant formation, this reduces the NOx formation (still need SCR catalyst, tho). AND - it also reduces the combustion 'rattle' noise.
Still, the BMEP & PCP is higher on diesels because you want the overall area under the pressure/time curve to be as large as possible.
Some of these diesels are over 3,000 psi now. Gasolines? not so much. What is the ecoboost? Most S.I. engines aren't over 1,000 psi.