We always talk about compression ratio, and it matters, but expansion ratio is what is getting the work out of the combustion. On a traditional engine the compression ratio and expansion ratio happen to be equal. The primary reason to bleed off compression pressure is strictly to humor the EPA. Internal combustion engines areHEAT engines. The hotter they operate (within design parameters) the mor efficient they are.BUT the powers that be have determined NOx emissions are bad. They are made by hight temperature/pressure. So now we reduce effective compression and force exhaust gas in to the engine to make it burn colder.That's the Atkinson in the Hybrid.
The air/fuel pushed back gets used for the next cycle so it isn't wasted.
Since the intake valve stays open for part of the compression stroke, the effective compression measured will be less that the typical expectation on an engine with a ~ 13.5 to 1 ratio, but the compression check itself would be the same, although the expected pressure reading will be lower than it would be for a typical 13 to 1 engine.
That's also why it can use 87 without pre-ignition detonation as a "normal" (Otto cycle) with a 13 to 1 would show a strong dislike for that fuel.
As was just noted, while the "effective" compression stroke on the Atkinson is shorter because the intake is open, that means the combustion/power stroke is effectively longer.
The original Atkinson's used a more complicated mechanism to enable the shorter compression/longer power stroke, but the more recent versions get the same benefit with valve control, and by leaving the intake values open the same benefit with less complexity.
Sponsored
