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The internal combustion engine is used to power
nearly all land vehicles and many water-based and air-based
vehicles as well. In an internal combustion engine, a fuel, such
as gasoline, fills a chamber and then is ignited by a spark
plug, causing a small explosion which generates work.
The superheated expanding gas created by the
explosion pushes a piston, which drives a crankshaft usually
connected to an axle. The axle is connected to wheels which turn
to drive a vehicle, such as an automobile, forward.
The entire assemblage of a chamber, spark
plug, piston, crankshaft, and valves that allow in fuel and air
is known as a cylinder. Whereas small appliances such as
chainsaws only use one cylinder, autmobiles generally use four
to eight. Historic aircraft have had as many as 28 cylinders to
provide the energy to drive their propellers.
The internal combustion engine is distinct
from external combustion engines (such as steam engines), in
that the energy generated from the combustion of fuel is
efficiently contained within a cylinder. In steam engines, fuel
is used to transform water into steam which then moves through a
mechanism and provides work. Internal combustion engines took
some time to perfect because the cylinder must be able to
withstand the wear and tear of many thousands of explosions over
the course of its operating lifetime.
Although engineers have been experimenting
with automobiles driven by various types of engines since the
18th century, it wasn't until the late 19th century that Germans
Daimler and Benz created internal combustion engines suited for
mass production and commercialization. This ushered in the
modern era of internal combustion engines used for a vast
variety of purposes. In common use for more than a century, it
could be a while before our engineers devise a new standard of
engine for powering our multitude of machines.
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