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Engineering
>> How Things Work >> How Car Cooling Systems Work |
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IntroductionIntroduction |
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Although
gasoline engines have improved a lot, they are still not very
efficient at turning chemical energy into mechanical power.
Most of the energy in the gasoline (perhaps 70%) is converted
into heat, and it is the job of the cooling system to take care
of that heat. In fact, the cooling system on a car driving down
the freeway dissipates enough heat to heat two average-sized
houses! The primary job of the cooling system is to keep the
engine from overheating by transferring this heat to the air,
but the cooling system also has several other important jobs.
The engine
in your car runs best at a fairly high temperature. When the
engine is cold, components wear out faster, and the engine
is less efficient and emits more pollution. So another important
job of the cooling system is to allow the engine to heat up
as quickly as possible, and then to keep the engine at a constant
temperature. |
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The
Basics |
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Inside
your car's engine, fuel is constantly burning. A lot of the
heat from this combustion goes right out the exhaust system,
but some of it soaks into the engine, heating it up. The engine
runs best when its coolant is about 200 degrees Fahrenheit
(93 degrees Celsius). At this temperature:
- The
combustion chamber is hot enough to completely vaporize
the fuel, providing better combustion and reducing emissions.
- The
oil used to lubricate the engine has a lower viscosity (it
is thinner), so the engine parts move more freely and the
engine wastes less power moving its own components around.
- Metal
parts wear less.
There
are two types of cooling systems found on cars: liquid-cooled
and air-cooled. |
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Liquid
Cooling |
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The
cooling system on liquid-cooled cars circulates a fluid through
pipes and passageways in the engine. As this liquid passes
through the hot engine it absorbs heat, cooling the engine.
After the fluid leaves the engine, it passes through a heat
exchanger, or radiator, which transfers the heat from the
fluid to the air blowing through the exchanger. |
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Air
Cooling |
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Some older
cars, and very few modern cars, are air-cooled. Instead of
circulating fluid through the engine, the engine block is
covered in aluminum fins that conduct the heat away from the
cylinder. A powerful fan forces air over these fins, which
cools the engine by transferring the heat to the air. |
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Plumbing |
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The cooling
system in your car has a lot of plumbing. We'll start at the
pump and work our way through the system, and in the next
sections we'll talk about each part of the system in more
detail.
The pump
sends the fluid into the engine block, where it makes its
way through passages in the engine around the cylinders. Then
it returns through the cylinder head of the engine. The thermostat
is located where the fluid leaves the engine. The plumbing
around the thermostat sends the fluid back to the pump directly
if the thermostat is closed. If it is open, the fluid goes
through the radiator first and then back to the pump.
There
is also a separate circuit for the heating system. This circuit
takes fluid from the cylinder head and passes it through a
heater core and then back to the pump. |
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On
cars with automatic transmissions, there is normally also
a separate circuit for cooling the transmission fluid built
into the radiator. The oil from the transmission is pumped
by the transmission through a second heat exchanger inside
the radiator. |
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Fluid |
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Cars operate
in a wide variety of temperatures, from well below freezing
to well over 100 F (38 C). So whatever fluid is used to cool
the engine has to have a very low freezing point, a high boiling
point, and it has to have the capacity to hold a lot of heat.
Water
is one of the most effective fluids for holding heat, but
water freezes at too high a temperature to be used in car
engines. The fluid that most cars use is a mixture of water
and ethylene glycol (C2H6O2), also known as antifreeze. By
adding ethylene glycol to water, the boiling and freezing
points are improved significantly |
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Pure
Water
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50/50
C2H6O2/Water
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70/30
C2H6O2/Water
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Freezing
Point |
0
C / 32 F
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-37
C / -35 F
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-55
C / -67 F
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Boiling
Point |
100
C / 212 F
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106
C / 223 F
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113
C / 235 F
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The
temperature of the coolant can sometimes reach 250 to 275 F
(121 to 135 C). Even with ethylene glycol added, these temperatures
would boil the coolant, so something additional must be done
to raise its boiling point.
The cooling
system uses pressure to further raise the boiling point of
the coolant. Just as the boiling temperature of water is higher
in a pressure cooker, the boiling temperature of coolant is
higher if you pressurize the system. Most cars have a pressure
limit of 14 to 15 pounds per square inch (psi), which raises
the boiling point another 45 F (25 C) so the coolant can withstand
the high temperatures.
Antifreeze
also contains additives to resist corrosion. |
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Water
Pump |
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The water
pump is a simple centrifugal pump driven by a belt connected
to the crankshaft of the engine. The pump circulates fluid
whenever the engine is running. |
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The water pump uses centrifugal force to send fluid to the outside
while it spins, causing fluid to be drawn from the center continuously.
The inlet to the pump is located near the center so that fluid
returning from the radiator hits the pump vanes. The pump vanes
fling the fluid to the outside of the pump, where it can enter
the engine.
The fluid
leaving the pump flows first through the engine block and
cylinder head, then into the radiator and finally back to
the pump. |
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Engine |
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The engine
block and cylinder head have many passageways cast or machined
in them to allow for fluid flow. These passageways direct
the coolant to the most critical areas of the engine.
Temperatures
in the combustion chamber of the engine can reach 4,500 F
(2,500 C), so cooling the area around the cylinders is critical.
Areas around the exhaust valves are especially crucial, and
almost all of the space inside the cylinder head around the
valves that is not needed for structure is filled with coolant.
If the engine goes without cooling for very long, it can seize.
When this happens, the metal has actually gotten hot enough
for the piston to weld itself to the cylinder. This usually
means the complete destruction of the engine.
One interesting
way to reduce the demands on the cooling system is to reduce
the amount of heat that is transferred from the combustion
chamber to the metal parts of the engine. Some engines do
this by coating the inside of the top of the cylinder head
with a thin layer of ceramic. Ceramic is a poor conductor
of heat, so less heat is conducted through to the metal and
more passes out of the exhaust. |
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Radiator |
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A radiator
is a type of heat exchanger. It is designed to transfer heat
from the hot coolant that flows through it to the air blown
through it by the fan.
Most modern
cars use aluminum radiators. These radiators are made by brazing
thin aluminum fins to flattened aluminum tubes. The coolant
flows from the inlet to the outlet through many tubes mounted
in a parallel arrangement. The fins conduct the heat from
the tubes and transfer it to the air flowing through the radiator.
The tubes
sometimes have a type of fin inserted into them called a turbulator,
which increases the turbulence of the fluid flowing through
the tubes. If the fluid flowed very smoothly through the tubes,
only the fluid actually touching the tubes would be cooled
directly. The amount of heat transferred to the tubes from
the fluid running through them depends on the difference in
temperature between the tube and the fluid touching it. So
if the fluid that is in contact with the tube cools down quickly,
less heat will be transferred. By creating turbulence inside
the tube, all of the fluid mixes together, keeping the temperature
of the fluid touching the tubes up so that more heat can be
extracted, and all of the fluid inside the tube is used effectively. |
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Radiators
usually have a tank on each side, and inside the tank is a transmission
cooler. In the picture above, you can see the inlet and outlet
where the oil from the transmission enters the cooler. The transmission
cooler is like a radiator within a radiator, except instead
of exchanging heat with the air, the oil exchanges heat with
the coolant in the radiator. |
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Pressure
Cap |
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The radiator
cap actually increases the boiling point of your coolant by
about 45 F (25 C). How does this simple cap do this? The same
way a pressure cooker increases the boiling temperature of
water. The cap is actually a pressure release valve, and on
cars it is usually set to 15 psi. The boiling point of water
increases when the water is placed under pressure.
When the
fluid in the cooling system heats up, it expands, causing
the pressure to build up. The cap is the only place where
this pressure can escape, so the setting of the spring on
the cap determines the maximum pressure in the cooling system.
When the pressure reaches 15 psi, the pressure pushes the
valve open, allowing coolant to escape from the cooling system.
This coolant flows through the overflow tube into the bottom
of the overflow tank. This arrangement keeps air out of the
system. When the radiator cools back down, a vacuum is created
in the cooling system that pulls open another spring loaded
valve, sucking water back in from the bottom of the overflow
tank to replace the water that was expelled. |
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Thermostat |
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The thermostat's
main job is to allow the engine to heat up quickly, and then
to keep the engine at a constant temperature. It does this
by regulating the amount of water that goes through the radiator.
At low temperatures, the outlet to the radiator is completely
blocked -- all of the coolant is recirculated back through
the engine.
Once the
temperature of the coolant rises to between 180 and 195 F
(82 - 91 C), the thermostat starts to open, allowing fluid
to flow through the radiator. By the time the coolant reaches
200 to 218 F (93 - 103 C), the thermostat is open all the
way. |
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If
you ever have the chance to test one, a thermostat is an amazing
thing to watch because what it does seems impossible. You can
put one in a pot of boiling water on the stove. As it heats
up, its valve opens about an inch, apparently by magic! If you'd
like to try this yourself, go to a car parts store and buy one
for a couple of bucks.
The secret
of the thermostat lies in the small cylinder located on the
engine-side of the device. This cylinder is filled with a
wax that begins to melt at around 180 F (different thermostats
open at different temperatures, but 180 F is a common one).
A rod connected to the valve presses into this wax. When the
wax melts, it expands significantly, pushing the rod out of
the cylinder and opening the valve. If you have read How Thermometers
Work and done the experiment with the bottle and the straw,
you have seen this process in action -- the wax just expands
a good bit more because it is changing from a solid to a liquid
in addition to expanding from the heat.
This same
technique is used in automatic openers for greenhouse vents
and skylights. In these devices, the wax melts at a lower
temperature. |
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Fan |
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Like the
thermostat, the cooling fan has to be controlled so that it
allows the engine to maintain a constant temperature.
Front-wheel
drive cars have electric fans because the engine is usually
mounted transversely, meaning the output of the engine points
toward the side of the car. The fans are controlled either
with a thermostatic switch or by the engine computer, and
they turn on when the temperature of the coolant goes above
a set point. They turn back off when the temperature drops
below that point.
Rear-wheel
drive cars with longitudinal engines usually have engine-driven
cooling fans. These fans have a thermostatically controlled
viscous clutch. This clutch is positioned at the hub of the
fan, in the airflow coming through the radiator. This special
viscous clutch is much like the viscous coupling sometimes
found in all-wheel drive cars. |
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Heating
System |
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You may
have heard the advice that if you car is overheating, open
all the windows and run the heater with the fan going at full
blast. This is because the heating system is actually a secondary
cooling system that mirrors the main cooling system on your
car.
The heater
core, which is located in the dashboard of your car, is really
a small radiator. The heater fan blows air through the heater
core and into the passenger compartment of your car.
The heater
core draws its hot coolant from the cylinder head and returns
it to the pump -- so the heater works regardless of whether
the thermostat is open or closed. |
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