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Internal-Combustion Engine

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About 1 pages (128 words)
Internal combustion engine Summary

Cross section showing one cylinder of a four-stroke internal-combustion engine. In the first stroke &elipsis; [Credit: © Merriam-Webster Inc.]Cross section showing one cylinder of a four-stroke internal-combustion engine. In the first stroke &elipsis; [Credit: © Merriam-Webster Inc.]

Any engine in which a fuel-air mixture is burned in the engine proper so that the hot gaseous products of combustion act directly on the surfaces of its moving parts, such as those of pistons (&see; piston and cylinder) or turbine rotor blades.

Internal-combustion engines include gasoline engines, diesel engines, gas turbine engines, pure jet engines, and rocket engines and motors, and are one class of heat engines. They are commonly divided into continuous-combustion engines and intermittent-combustion engines. In the first type (e.g., jet engines) fuel and air flow steadily into the engine, where a stable flame is maintained for continuous combustion. In the second (e.g., gasoline–reciprocating-piston engines), discrete quantities of fuel and air are periodically ignited. &Seealso; automobile industry, machine, steam engine.

This is the complete article, containing 128 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page).

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    Internal-Combustion Engine from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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