Perhaps it's a little more involved than that.
During compression, the air heats up to a temperature that's adequate to ignite the fuel.
The fuel has to be injected sufficently early so that it begins to burn just as TDC is reached. For #2 oil, injection has to be fairly early in normal engines, and *way* early in engines running high RPM or lowered compression. For gasoline or alcohol, injection can occur later because these fuels ignite easier.
The specific time of injection depends on many things, including charge air temp, fuel temp, the 'fineness' of atomization, the ignitability of the fuel, the 'velocity of the flame fron the fuel can sustain, the temperature of the block and head.
Injection timing can also depend on whether the system is mechanical or common rail. Mechanical systems 'shoot their wad' all at 'once'. CR systems can deploy 3-10 injection events, starting with a very short pilot injection to initially increase pressure and temperature, then succeesingly longer events as the piston moves down to control how fast cylinder pressure increases.
At BDC after the power stroke, the exhaust valve opens, and excess pressure is relieved. Then the piston moves up again, forcing the still-hot combustion products into the exhaust manifold, where pressure is typically somewhere in the vicinity of boost pressure, and thence through the turbo, where the exhaust gasses give up more of their energy to spin the turbo.
At TDC after exhaust, the exhaust valve closes and the intake opens. Well, OK. You purists out there are going to *insist* that I say the exhaust valve closes just before TDC, and the intake valve opens just after, because it's not good when pistons and valves meet. Which begs the question: why is there no NBA team named, "The Valves". Pistons vs. Valves would be a natural rivalry, offensive to only the most off-the-wall group using the most off-the wall dictionary that can be found, and one team or the other would nearly always lose. But I digress.
During the intake stroke, the charge air rushes into the cylinder.
At BDC after intake, the intake valve closes, and the compression stroke begins.
Now, you want to tune the intake? Install a number of fast pressure transducers along the charge air path and determine the pressure drops along the path. You think 50PSI boost means constant 50PSI pressure throughout the charge air system? Nope. As soon as an intake valve opens, the pressure will drop on the back side of that valve until the air behind the valve starts flowing to fill the gap, and the air behind that air. So you should be able to watch waves of low pressure move backward in the charge air system until the wave meets air that is already flowing forward.
Here's a weird thought. Put a blow-off valve near each intake port. Set each valve to pop off at max boost, and size each valve to move, say, 1/4 of the volume of air that each cylinder needs. The idea is to keep air moving in the manifold so as to reduce the 'standing waves' that can build up and rob power. I won't address handling the excess pressure that builds when the valve closes suddenly. (Ever hear your water pipes clank when you shut the water off quicky? Same concept. )
Another idea: change the intake valve timing so that it closes 40 degrees after BDC. Remember, at BDC, the piston has stopped moving, but air will still be flowing in. Might as well try to take advantage of that motion as long as possible, to cram extra air into the cylinder. Man, solenoid-operated valves are looking *so* useful right about now: leave the intake valve open until the pressure by the port is almost back up to the 'constant state' pressure farther back in the charge air stream. And close the exhaust valve, say, 30 degrees before TDC and open the intake valve for 10 degrees. Then open it again 10 degrees after TDC for the intake stroke.
Huh. I never picture the working of a piston before. Clearly it is sinusoidal. But it isn't a perfect sine wave in operation. Picture a piston with a 6" con-rod and a crank with a 2. 5" arm. So it has a 5" stroke. The odd thing is, because of the con-rod's length, the piston is 2" from BDC when the crank arm is at 90 degrees, rather than the 2. 5" one would expect from a pure sine wave. Of course, this also means that the piston's max speed is not when the crank arm is 90 degrees to the cylinder. Rather it happens when the crank arm and the con rod are orthogonal to each other, which is closer to mid-stroke.
Anoter thing I'd never pondered before is the effect of con-rod length on piston travel. A short con-rod (close to the length of the crank arm) will make the piston spend much of its time near BDC, and very little time near TDC. This is great for rapidly heating the charge air (via compression) and good for fast-burning fuels like alcohol and gasoline. On the other paw, a long con-rod (much greater than the length of the crank arm) will make the piston spend less time near BDC. For example. Consider the 2. 5" crank arm mated with a 3" and a 6" con-rod. I 90 degrees of rotation, the engine with the 3" con-rod will move the piston about 4" of its 5" stroke, whereas an engine with the 6" con rod will move the piston about 3" of its 5" stroke.
So the ratio of crank arm length to con-rod length is a fair indicator of how fast your fuel has to burn and how much compression you need to ignite the fuel. Near 1:1, fuel has to burn fast, but the compression ratio can be lower, because the charge air is compressed *really* fast, allowing less heat to be transferred to the head/block. Much greater than 1:1 (like 3:1 and higher), fuel can burn slower because it has more time to burn, but compression ratio has to be higher, because there's more time for the head/block to suck heat out of the charge air.
So it's more like Succcckkkkkkkkk, ssssssssqqqqquueeze, bang, bbbbbblllow. And the 'bang' can be either bbbbaaang or bbaanng, depending on the con-rod:crank arm ratio.
My tuppence.
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