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Fredrik Ljungström

Fredrik Ljungström (16 June 1875 – 18 February 1964) was a Swedish engineer, technical designer, and industrialist.

Fredrik Ljungström
Fredrik Ljungström in Dagens Nyheter.
Born(1875-06-16)16 June 1875
Died18 February 1964(1964-02-18) (aged 88)
NationalitySwedish
EducationÖstra Real
Alma materRoyal Institute of Technology
Occupation(s)Engineer
Technical designer
Industrialist
FamilyJonas Patrik Ljungström father
Olof Ljungström son
Birger Ljungström brother
Georg Ljungström brother
Oscar Ljungström brother
George Spaak brother-in-law
Johan Börjesson great uncle
Johan Wingård great uncle
The Ljungström Non-condensing Turbine Locomotive by Ljungström Steam Turbine Co. (Swedish: Aktiebolaget Ljungströms Ångturbin) (1931), established in 1908.

Considered one of the foremost inventors of Sweden,[1][2] Fredrik Ljungström accounted for hundreds of technical patents alone and in collaboration with his brother Birger Ljungström (1872–1948): from early bicycling free wheeling hubs techniques and mechanical automatic transmissions for vehicles, to steam turbines, air preheaters, and circular arc hulls for sailing boats. He co-founded companies such as The New Cycle Company, Ljungström Steam Turbine Co. and Ljungström Swedish Turbine Manufacturing Co. (STAL), and associated with other industrialists such as Alfred Nobel, Helge Palmcrantz, Gustaf de Laval, Curt Nicolin, and Gustaf Dalén. As innovative as his ideas were in function, they also often turned out in terms of unconventional external design, such as his steam turbine locomotives and sailboats.

During the resource scarcity of World War II, Fredrik Ljungström's innovative technology for oil shale underground gasification by electrical energy, called the Ljungström method, provided a strategical impact for the Swedish Armed Forces.[3] In addition, Ljungström's technology contributed to the first Swedish jet engine, torpedoes, and more.

With Fredrik Ljungström's air preheater implemented in a large number of modern power stations around the world until this day with total attributed worldwide fuel savings estimated to 4,960,000,000 tons of oil, "few inventions have been as successful in saving fuel as the Ljungström Air Preheater". In 1995, the Ljungström air preheater was distinguished as the 44th International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.[4] His works are represented by the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology, the Nordic Museum, and the Swedish Railway Museum, as well as internationally such as by the Science Museum in London, England and by Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci in Milan, Italy.[5]

Early life and background

 
Fredrik Ljungström in portrait painting in Finspång Castle, Östergötland, Sweden.

Fredrik Ljungström was born in 1875 in Stockholm to cartographer Jonas Patrik Ljungström and Amalia (née Falck). His second great uncle was Johan Börjesson, and his third great uncle Bishop Johan Wingård. Among his siblings were Georg Ljungström, Oscar Ljungström, Birger Ljungström, and among his brothers-in-law, George Spaak. Fredrik Ljungström was married twice, first to Elizabeth (née Waesterberg), daughter of Amanda Sandborg Waesterberg, from whom he was widowed, and secondly to Signe (née Söderberg), daughter of Wilhelm Theodor Söderberg. Among his issue was Gunnar Ljungström, and among his sons-in-law, Arthur Lundblom, and Torsten Cassel.

Educated at Östra Real, he attended the Royal Institute of Technology from where he was subsequently conferred an Honorary Doctorate in 1944. Technical innovativity was notably initiated in the ateliers of his father in Östermalm in Stockholm, that cooperated among others with the early manufactory of L. M. Ericsson. Of importance to his significant autodidact studies was also the tutorship in physics by Salomon August Andrée, as was the early mentorship of Alfred Nobel. Later, Fredrik Ljungström would in turn offer mentorship to junior industrialists such as Curt Nicolin.

Alfred Nobel was aged 61 when he met Fredrik and Birger Ljungström, who were 19 and 22 years old respectively. Nobel, who didn't have any children of his own, would enthusiastically collaborate in the brothers' early endeavours. Nobel and the brothers soon became good friends, discussing the world's problems and existential questions of the time, as a certain "father-and-son-like relation" emerged. 60 years later, when recalling their talks and time spent together, Fredrik Ljungström commended Nobel's capacity to "discuss the most complex questions with the unexperienced youngsters yet on equal terms", and that "his critical eye to the contemporary issues was extraordinarily bright"; concluding that "the blood runs warm in my old veins when I think of him."[6]

Fredrik Ljungström died in 1964 on Lidingö, and was buried at Norra begravningsplatsen, Stockholm.

Svea Velocipede

 
Svea Velocipede exhibited at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology.

The Svea Velocipede was an early invention by Fredrik Ljungström in collaboration with his brothers Birger, Axel and Oscar Ljungström. Helge Palmcrantz was also part of the project. An early example in the history of the bicycle, the pedals mechanism of the Svea Velocipede was straight vertical, driven by free wheeling hubs, which was patented by the brothers in 1892, with the shift patented in 1895.

Attended and supported by Alfred Nobel, the project was further developed stretching also to London, where the Ljungström brothers relocated in 1895 upon recommendation by Nobel. Under the company name The New Cycle Company, to which also George Spaak was connected, the product sold about 2,000 units in Sweden, and 150 units in Great Britain. Production remained until 1898. Although the general preference for circular pedal mechanisms became clear with time, later bicycle models on the market would adopt its foot-operated bicycle brakes while also employing its free wheeling hubs.

The Svea Velocipede is exhibited inter alia at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology and the Nordic Museum in Stockholm, Sweden.[7]

Steam generator

 
With 12 knot, the Ljungström steam engine sloop (1895) became the fastest steamboat around Stockholm archipelago.

By 1895, Fredrik Ljungström had developed and patented a steam generator, an invention in which Alfred Nobel put particular interest, especially its surface condenser invention. Applied to a sloop, with speed reaching 12 knot, it became the fastest steamboat around Stockholm archipelago.

Also this invention was exported to England in 1896 along with Fredrik, first catching the interest of the early Dunford & Elliot in Newcastle upon Tyne. Although the project's initial supporter Alfred Nobel died in 1896, in 1900 The Ljungström Engine Syndicate Limited was founded for the purposes in Newcastle, to which the brothers relocated along with their families, with George Spaak designated as CEO. Despite production being halted again in 1902, several principles of the construction would prove important to the subsequent Ljungström steam engine.

After The Ljungström Engine Syndicate Limited, Fredrik and Birger went on to work out the first automatic milking device in Sweden, Beta (1901), which caught the interest of Alfred Nobel's nephew Ludvig Nobel (1868–1946) as well as Gustaf Laval at Laval AB Separator. Fredrik would remain leading engineer in this venture, Mjölkningsmaskin AB in Kungsholmen, Stockholm, until 1908. At the same time, the brothers also developed methods for paraffin of mineral oil, i.e. die casting of brass, zinc and aluminium that would become well received. The technology would however only prove successful for the market in 1922.

Soon enough, however, it was evident that steam turbines would be the main focus for the brothers' ventures.

Steam turbines

 
STAL turbine at the entrance of the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology. A rather small but worthy representative of this turbine type, acquired by the museum in 1993.

It has been said that Fredrik Ljungström's insights in the steam power came to him already as a child at home, observing how cuisine was prepared in the kitchen. While late Alfred Nobel had continuously paid interest in the development of the steam turbines, this invention were also endorsed figures such as Professor Aurel Stodola in 1907.

Ljungström Steam Turbine Co.

 
The turbine rotor for Ljungström steam turbine 50 MW electric generator (circa 1932).

The new steam turbine technology became the base for the company Ljungström steam turbine Co. (AB Ljungströms Ångturbin, ALÅ), founded in 1908 in Sweden, that owned all the patents on this revolutionising turbine construction. A workshop was first established on Kungsholmen, in premises where a predecessor of Electrolux had recently been founded. Next year the workshop was relocated to Liljeholmen, Stockholm (future sv:Färgfabriken), where the first turbine was finished in 1910. Already the first unit indicated world records performance. By 1911, a significantly larger unit was produced and successfully tested, with improvements attributed solely to Fredrik Ljungström's hand. With also a new generator construction added by Fredrik, the Ljungström turbine's defining features were now ready for the market. The first turbine was sold to North Metropolitan Electric Power Supply Co. for energy supply of the London County Council Tramways. Despite being a prototype, the unit would remain in service for 50 years until it was relocated for exhibition in the Science Museum in London.

Ljungström Swedish Turbine Manufacturing Co.

 
Ljungström Swedish Turbine Manufacturing Co. (Swedish: Svenska Turbinfabriks Aktiebolaget Ljungström, STAL), established in 1913.

In 1913, the brothers cofounded a new company, STAL (Svenska Turbinfabriks Aktiebolaget Ljungström; Swedish turbine manufacturing Co.) under the aegis of ALÅ. Just some two years after the last artillery pieces ceased production in Finspång, Östergötland - a former epicenter of the military industry of Sweden since Louis De Geer founded it in 1631 - STAL acquired Finspång complete with the Finspång Castle along with surroundings territories and real estate, erecting a new large scale factory complex at the site.[8] The design studies and management facilities were installed inside the castle. Mechanical engineer Karl Gustaf Karlson, later Professor at Chalmers University of Technology, was connected to the development. This company handled the manufacturing and sales of complete steam turbine driven electric generators. The turbine provided a 10% higher thermodynamic efficiency than previous constructions, in addition to being more compact, requiring less space. STAL:s solutions proved successful, and with contracts such as with Siemens and General Electric, its activities expanded into Europe and beyond, both for stationary uses as well as for marine vessels.

"Fredrik Ljungström was", writes Anders Johnson in Turbines from Finspång - from STAL to Siemens 1913-2013, "not only a successful inventor but also skilled in management and leading the construction processes." His modern work methods were reflected in a checklist of 56 questions to the engineers at STAL, which also included aspects of safety and ergonomics. Most reputed of these questions was nr 14: "Is the construction unnecessarily hideous?".

STAL was acquired by ASEA in 1916 as they wished to market complete packages with turbine driven electric generators. The deal was carried out when significant owners and representatives where away on business trips in the turbulent Russian Empire, unable to remain in communication. The brothers then left the company but kept control over all the patents and manufacturing licenses for the Ljungström steam turbines within the company ALÅ. STAL merged with De Laval in the 1950s under the name Stal-Laval. In the 1960s, Fredrik Ljungström returned to operations to make significant renewed contributions to the technology the years before he died in 1964. After then having been managed by ABB, the factories would eventually be acquired by Siemens 2003 under the name Siemens Industrial Turbomachinery AB.[9]

The technical solutions developed by the brothers at STAL remains employed all over the world with several world records throughout its history in terms of efficiency, fuel savings, size and power until present-day. In 2009, it was estimated some 328 units where equipped with Ljungström's technology, some of which has consisted of the largest vessels ever produced, from vehicles such as the London Underground or the word's largest supertanker Seawise Giant to a vast number of power plants. Only in Sweden, out of its 18 nuclear plants 16 were equipped with the turbines. Furthermore, increasingly since 2005, the technology has proved successful in solar power. In 2008, almost 100% of all sun power plants where equipped by the Ljungström turbines.[10]

Steam turbine locomotives

 
Ljungström steam turbine locomotive (1921), adopted as Swedish Railways Turbine Locomotive Littera Å (1922).
 
Ljungström steam turbine locomotive at Stockholm Central Station (1922).

The brothers also designed a number of steam turbine locomotives, some of which were highly successful, starting in 1917. One of the largest factory in the region was set up for the purpose in Gåshaga, Lidingö, Stockholm, in 1918, where the Ljungström brothers also worked out the Ljungström heat exchanger for their locomotives. After successfully assembled, this locomotive proved to be the strongest to ever have been produced. On top of the increased power, since the locomotive reused much of the steam from the turbine exits, its permitted more far-reaching distances without having to fill up water.

The first successful attempt for the Swedish Railways in March 1921, patented in July 1922, was a rather odd-looking 12 tons machine. Its three driving axles were located under the tender, and the cab and boiler sat on unpowered wheels. Tests on the designated distance Stockholm-Gothenburg Western Main Line indicated 35% coal savings in comparison with the conventional solutions.[11] The design with driving wheels on both the boiler carriage and the tender with separate turbines would eventually change. The second design was a 2-8-0 similar to a successful freight design. The locomotive was equipped with two wagons for the engine functions. Several patents followed suit the next following years, with Nydqvist & Holm AB selected as licensed manufacturer. Ljungström locomotives where employed for the distances Stockholm-Krylbo and Stockholm-Bollnäs. The turbine effect of this locomotive reached 1,470 kW (1 997 hp) at 10,000 rpm, with a maximum speed of 90 km/h.[12] In 1930, the 2000th Ljungström locomotive was rolled out of the factory of Nydqvist & Holm AB: TGOJ M3 47, M3t 71.[13] This locomotive remained in use until 1931 when it was replaced along the electrification of the Swedish railways in addition to diesel-electric-engined locomotives. Yet, built from 1930 to 1936 by Nydqvist & Holm, Ljungström locomotives continued to replace conventional ones on the Grängesberg-Oxelösund Railway. No condenser was fitted, as its complexity outweighed its thermodynamic advantages. The wheels were driven by a jackshaft. These engines were in use until 1953 when the line was electrified.[14]

 
The Beyer-Peacock Quarterly Review (July 1927) by Beyer, Peacock and Company: "'Ljungström' turbine condenser locomotive on London-Manchester Express, near Mill Hill, L.M.S. Railway."

The "enormous amount of experimental work" made into the Ljungström locomotives also gained international attention. One locomotive was delivered to the Argentine State Railway, designated for the 800 km long distance between Tucumán and Santa Fe, largely through desert with limited water access, needs to which the Ljungström system was especially fitted. This locomotives was equipped with a larger water tank and increased condenser capacity, with turbine power reaching an effect of 1,290 kW (1,753 hp) at 10,000 rpm, decreasing the fuel savings up to 40%. The locomotive remained in service until its disappearance during the Argentine Revolution (1966-1973). From England, Beyer, Peacock and Company sent two engineers to participate and supervise the progress in Stockholm. The company eventually ordered license construction at Gorton Foundry of a copy of the Swedish Railways turbine locomotive SJ Littera Å, employed in London, Midland and Scottish Railway. Its design power was 2,000 hp at 10,500 rpm, corresponding to a speed on the rails of 78 mph. Design steam conditions were 300 lb/sqin at 200 degC superheat. It was employed for regular passenger service in lines from Derby to Manchester, Birmingham and London with "very considerable economies in coal and water consumption."[15][16] Deutsche Reichsbahn had use for the technology especially in Bavaria.

It is to the Swedish engineer Ljungstrom that the transport world is indebted for the latest and most varied developments of the steam turbine railway locomotive. His experiments have taken place over a number of years. Sweden, being a country deficient in coal, is particularly interested in an increase in the thermal efficiency of the locomotive and in fuel economies.

— Wonders of World Engineering, part 19, 6 July 1937[17]

The old locomotive factory on Lidingö was demolished with dynamite in 1972.

Three engines of the Ljungström type have been preserved in Sweden. Two units (71 and 73) are exhibited by the Railway Museum of Grängesberg, and the third (72) by the Swedish Railway Museum. The one in Grängesberg is the world's only remaining steam turbine locomotive in function, Ljungström M3t nr 71, manufactured in 1930 by Nydqvist & Holm AB and renovated by the Locomotive Museum for the 125th anniversary of the Swedish Railways in June 1981, and again in 2014, financed by the Swedish National Heritage Board.[18][19] Still "world unique" steam turbine locomotives, with a power of 22 tons, it is still Sweden's most powerful steam locomotive in funcion: practical tests showed that it was able to transport 2,000 tons in 17 per mille elevation.[20] Digital emulations has also been created for the 3D train simulator video game Trainz.[21][22]

Air preheaters

 
Ljungström regenerative heat exchanger (circa 1930).

Fredrik Lindström also invented an efficient air preheater, which even in a modern utility boiler provides up to 20 percent of the total heat transfer in the boiler process, but only represents 2 percent of the investment.[23] One of Fredrik Ljungströms first patents was a heat exchanger radiator acquired in 1896. Several years later, the Ljungström air preheater innovation was a result of the factory in Lidingö, with patent achieved in 1930,[24] although an anecdote traces the inception to an air conditioning concern during a visit in the smoky premises of the Royal Swedish Opera in Stockholm in 1919.

The factory and workshop activities and laboratories in Lidingö would remain throughout the 1920s, with some 70 personnel. In the 1930s, it was used a film studio, and was finally demolished in the 1970s to give space for new industry premises.

ASEA acquired a majority of the company in 1916, and Erik Sundblad was designated CEO. Royalties were ceased in 1944.

In 1995, it was estimated that the Ljungström air preheater had sold tens of thousands of units for in total some 20 billion dollars.

Shale oil extraction

During the resource scarcity of World War II, Fredrik Ljungström's innovative technology for shale oil extraction underground gasification by electrical energy, called the Ljungström method, provided a significant strategical impact for the Royal Swedish Navy and Air Force.[3] Fredrik Ljungström obtained his last patent in this industry in 1954. The Ljungström fields outside Örebro, with a war production of about 70,000 m3, were inactived after the war but with a possibility of reactivation in case of renewed need of domestic oil source. While the project was initially supported by Vattenfall, eventually Svenska Skifferolje AB (SSAB) was employed with maintaining the Ljungström fields, which remained in active production until 1966.[25][26][27]

Naval engineering

 
Ljungström sailboat, 1950. USPTO No. 2107303 (manufactured 8 February 8, 1938).
 
Fredrik Ljungström the yacht designer in Life magazine (1951), onboard Vingen XII (the "Wing" XII), wearing his mariner cap from the Lysekil Yacht Club.

Fredrik Ljungström, an enthusiastic sailor and keen member of the Royal Swedish Yacht Club, made several inventions out of new ideas related to sailing boats. The Ljungström sailboat with the circular arc hull and the Ljungström rig, without a boom and double sail that can work as a spinnaker, is named after Fredrik Ljungström.[28] The history of the productions are represented at the Maritime Museum in Stockholm.[29] He also experimented with a vibrationless yacht motor.

Other ventures

The transmission technology Spontaneous gear 1920, an automatic gear box developed by Fredrik Ljungström in the 1920s, attracted attention on the Swedish market, and several private cars were equipped with the system with positive results. A new company was established with this purpose and, Ljungströmsbilen (Swedish: The Ljungström Car). Axel Wenner-Gren took interest, followed by Chrysler in the United States, but both had to retreat shortly afterwards due to the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the subsequent Great Depression. Still, an invention of hydraulic gear saw success during World War II with royalties paid by the United States. This gear was used for Vabis-built railbuses, as well as the Swedish railcars used in Scania. Part of the other technology also moved on to the first Saab cars.

Although initially interested in aerospace engineering (Fredrik drafted a flight machine project late 19th century), applied aerodynamics were never among his main subjects of interest, especially after having lost his son and pilot Lieutenant Einar Ljungström in an airplane crash in 1927. Despite this, after World War II, Ljungström's technology contributed to the first Swedish jet engine, with STAL Dovern based in part on his technology, developed by the company he founded.

Fredrik Ljungström become a well-reputed figure in the 20th century technical industry in Sweden. Together with his fellow at Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences Gustaf Dalén, the two inventors once came late to a meeting going around town in their coach in enthusiastic discussions on new ideas. Curt Nicolin praised the influence in an obituary on Fredrik Ljungström.

The works of Fredrik Ljungström are represented in the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology, the Nordic Museum, the Swedish Railway Museum, the Maritime Museum, the Nobel Museum, and the Lidingö Museum, among others.

Image gallery

Bibliography

  • Studie över fartyg med formen bestämd av cirkelbågar och dess tillämpning på segelbärande motrofartyg och passagerarfartyg, Stockholm, Sveriges standardiseringskommission, 1952
  • Unda Maris 1947–48. Tema: Nordisk fiskebåtbyggarekongress 1947, Sjöfartsmuseet, 1948
  • Cirkelbågsskrov (Segel och motor), 1939: nr. 5–8, 25 s
  • Ljungströms luftförvärmare: Föredrag, hållet vid Föreningens för kraft- och bränsleekonomi årsmöte i Helsingfors den 27 April 1923, Helsingfors, 1923
  • Ljungströms turbinlokomotiv, Stockholm, 1922
  • The Development of the Ljungström Steam Turbine and Air Preheater by Dr. Fredrik Ljungström, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, volume 160, issue 1 (1 June 1949)[30]

Distinctions

 
Eponymous Birger and Fredrik Ljungström Commemorative Medal (1976) of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences.
 
Medal (1957) of the Swedish Rotor Machines, designed by Swedish sculptor Leo Holmberg. Depicting on one side Fredrik Ljungström, on the other side Prometheus and Ariel; figures of forethought and air.
 
STAL plaquette in bronze. Depicting on one side Louis De Geer (1587–1652) and Finspång Castle, on the other side STAL (Swedish: Svenska Turbinfabriks Aktiebolaget Ljungström). Produced by AB Sporrong & Co. From the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology.

Orders

Academic

Awards

Fellowships

Eponyms

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-11-30. Retrieved 2016-06-17.
  2. ^ "Ljungströmare genom tiderna".
  3. ^ a b "Fredrik Ljungström - Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon".
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-10-20. Retrieved 2016-06-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ . sit-ab.leon.se. Archived from the original on 2013-09-11.
  6. ^ Nobel: den gåtfulle Alfred, hans värld och hans pris (2019), Norstedts, by Ingrid Carlberg, ISBN 9789113069395
  7. ^ "Trampa runt? Nej, upp och ner! | Minnesmaskinen". 28 June 2011.
  8. ^ "686 (Teknisk Tidskrift / Årgång 90. 1960)".
  9. ^ . www.sit-ab.se. Archived from the original on 2011-05-27.
  10. ^ Fröberg, Jonas (18 April 2008). "Ångturbiner strålande affär för Finspång". Svenska Dagbladet.
  11. ^ "En bild berättar: Ett unikt ånglok byggs i Gåshaga …".
  12. ^ "Alla Sveriges ånglok, ellok, diesellok, växellok, private lok, privatbanelok".
  13. ^ "Ångturbinlokomotivets utveckling".
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-04-07. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
  15. ^ "A British Ljungstrom Turbine Locomotive - Railway Wonders of the World".
  16. ^ "The Beyer-Ljungstrom Turbine Locomotive".
  17. ^ "The Turbine Locomotive - Wonders of World Engineering".
  18. ^ Information enligt Lokmuseet i Grängesberg
  19. ^ "300 000 kronor till rust av turbinlok". 13 June 2014.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-09-23. Retrieved 2017-05-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  21. ^ "Ångturbinlok TGOJ M3t 71, 72 och 73 - Svenska 3D-Tåg - Forum".
  22. ^ "Swedish 3D steam locos for Trainz developed by JOComms". Jocomms.webs.com. 2017-01-12. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  23. ^ (PDF) (PDF). Svenska Mekanisters Riksförening; American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  24. ^ Patent USPTO No. 1746598, 11 February 1930
  25. ^ "Områdeshistoria".
  26. ^ "1218 (Teknisk Tidskrift / Årgång 75. 1945)".
  27. ^ https://www.gorek.se/skriftx/ssab.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  28. ^ "Ljungströmare genom tiderna - Yachting 1/77".
  29. ^ "Ritning".
  30. ^ Ljungström, Fredrik (1949). "The Development of the Ljungström Steam Turbine and Air Preheater". Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. 160: 211–223. doi:10.1243/PIME_PROC_1949_160_023_02.
  31. ^ Samtliga pristagare 2009-12-06 at the Wayback Machine kth.se, retrieved on 2009-02-05
  32. ^ James Watt International Medal Recipients 2009-03-19 at the Wayback Machine imeche.org, retrieved on 2009-02-05
  33. ^ Svenska Dagbladet 19 March 1950, p. 3
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-11-26. Retrieved 2017-05-02.

Literature

External links

  • Biography at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology website 2016-07-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • STAL company page at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology website 2016-09-09 at the Wayback Machine
  • Photo collection of Ljungström steam turbine locomotives at the Railway Museum of Grängesberg
  • Utvecklingen av Ljungströms ångturbin och luftförvärmare, Tekn. dr Fredrik Ljungström, Fiskebäckskil
  • Ljungström Prize of the Swedish National Mechanics' Association 2018-02-21 at the Wayback Machine (sv)
  • SRM 100 year jubilee, the story about the Ljungström brothers
  • Free Patents Online: Fredrik Ljungstrom
  • LJUNGSTRÖM Corporate website
  • Pupulär Historia (Swedish)
  • [1] (Swedish)
  • Ljungström, mer än bara båtar! ("Ljungström, more than just boats", Maritime Museum of Stockholm
  • The Meccano Magazine, July 1927

Videos

  • Swedish Railway Museum exhibition "Paramountjournalen" (October 1929)
  • TGOJ M3t 71 pulling heavy timber in Sweden
  • Model of Beyer-Ljungström steam turbine locomotive on model railway
  • TGOJ Litt M3t 72 Steam turbin locomotive is pulled out of the sheed for the first time in along time
  • LJUNGSTRÖM Air Preheater (APH) & Gas-gas Heater (GGH) Power Plant Overview

fredrik, ljungström, june, 1875, february, 1964, swedish, engineer, technical, designer, industrialist, dagens, nyheter, born, 1875, june, 1875stockholm, swedendied18, february, 1964, 1964, aged, lidingö, swedennationalityswedisheducationöstra, realalma, mater. Fredrik Ljungstrom 16 June 1875 18 February 1964 was a Swedish engineer technical designer and industrialist Fredrik LjungstromFredrik Ljungstrom in Dagens Nyheter Born 1875 06 16 16 June 1875Stockholm SwedenDied18 February 1964 1964 02 18 aged 88 Lidingo SwedenNationalitySwedishEducationOstra RealAlma materRoyal Institute of TechnologyOccupation s EngineerTechnical designerIndustrialistFamilyJonas Patrik Ljungstrom fatherOlof Ljungstrom sonBirger Ljungstrom brotherGeorg Ljungstrom brotherOscar Ljungstrom brotherGeorge Spaak brother in lawJohan Borjesson great uncleJohan Wingard great uncleThe Ljungstrom Non condensing Turbine Locomotive by Ljungstrom Steam Turbine Co Swedish Aktiebolaget Ljungstroms Angturbin 1931 established in 1908 Considered one of the foremost inventors of Sweden 1 2 Fredrik Ljungstrom accounted for hundreds of technical patents alone and in collaboration with his brother Birger Ljungstrom 1872 1948 from early bicycling free wheeling hubs techniques and mechanical automatic transmissions for vehicles to steam turbines air preheaters and circular arc hulls for sailing boats He co founded companies such as The New Cycle Company Ljungstrom Steam Turbine Co and Ljungstrom Swedish Turbine Manufacturing Co STAL and associated with other industrialists such as Alfred Nobel Helge Palmcrantz Gustaf de Laval Curt Nicolin and Gustaf Dalen As innovative as his ideas were in function they also often turned out in terms of unconventional external design such as his steam turbine locomotives and sailboats During the resource scarcity of World War II Fredrik Ljungstrom s innovative technology for oil shale underground gasification by electrical energy called the Ljungstrom method provided a strategical impact for the Swedish Armed Forces 3 In addition Ljungstrom s technology contributed to the first Swedish jet engine torpedoes and more With Fredrik Ljungstrom s air preheater implemented in a large number of modern power stations around the world until this day with total attributed worldwide fuel savings estimated to 4 960 000 000 tons of oil few inventions have been as successful in saving fuel as the Ljungstrom Air Preheater In 1995 the Ljungstrom air preheater was distinguished as the 44th International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 4 His works are represented by the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology the Nordic Museum and the Swedish Railway Museum as well as internationally such as by the Science Museum in London England and by Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci in Milan Italy 5 Contents 1 Early life and background 2 Svea Velocipede 3 Steam generator 4 Steam turbines 4 1 Ljungstrom Steam Turbine Co 4 2 Ljungstrom Swedish Turbine Manufacturing Co 5 Steam turbine locomotives 6 Air preheaters 7 Shale oil extraction 8 Naval engineering 9 Other ventures 10 Image gallery 11 Bibliography 12 Distinctions 12 1 Orders 12 2 Academic 12 3 Awards 12 4 Fellowships 12 5 Eponyms 13 References 14 Literature 15 External links 15 1 VideosEarly life and background Edit Fredrik Ljungstrom in portrait painting in Finspang Castle Ostergotland Sweden Fredrik Ljungstrom was born in 1875 in Stockholm to cartographer Jonas Patrik Ljungstrom and Amalia nee Falck His second great uncle was Johan Borjesson and his third great uncle Bishop Johan Wingard Among his siblings were Georg Ljungstrom Oscar Ljungstrom Birger Ljungstrom and among his brothers in law George Spaak Fredrik Ljungstrom was married twice first to Elizabeth nee Waesterberg daughter of Amanda Sandborg Waesterberg from whom he was widowed and secondly to Signe nee Soderberg daughter of Wilhelm Theodor Soderberg Among his issue was Gunnar Ljungstrom and among his sons in law Arthur Lundblom and Torsten Cassel Educated at Ostra Real he attended the Royal Institute of Technology from where he was subsequently conferred an Honorary Doctorate in 1944 Technical innovativity was notably initiated in the ateliers of his father in Ostermalm in Stockholm that cooperated among others with the early manufactory of L M Ericsson Of importance to his significant autodidact studies was also the tutorship in physics by Salomon August Andree as was the early mentorship of Alfred Nobel Later Fredrik Ljungstrom would in turn offer mentorship to junior industrialists such as Curt Nicolin Alfred Nobel was aged 61 when he met Fredrik and Birger Ljungstrom who were 19 and 22 years old respectively Nobel who didn t have any children of his own would enthusiastically collaborate in the brothers early endeavours Nobel and the brothers soon became good friends discussing the world s problems and existential questions of the time as a certain father and son like relation emerged 60 years later when recalling their talks and time spent together Fredrik Ljungstrom commended Nobel s capacity to discuss the most complex questions with the unexperienced youngsters yet on equal terms and that his critical eye to the contemporary issues was extraordinarily bright concluding that the blood runs warm in my old veins when I think of him 6 Fredrik Ljungstrom died in 1964 on Lidingo and was buried at Norra begravningsplatsen Stockholm Svea Velocipede Edit Svea Velocipede exhibited at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology Main article Svea Velocipede The Svea Velocipede was an early invention by Fredrik Ljungstrom in collaboration with his brothers Birger Axel and Oscar Ljungstrom Helge Palmcrantz was also part of the project An early example in the history of the bicycle the pedals mechanism of the Svea Velocipede was straight vertical driven by free wheeling hubs which was patented by the brothers in 1892 with the shift patented in 1895 Attended and supported by Alfred Nobel the project was further developed stretching also to London where the Ljungstrom brothers relocated in 1895 upon recommendation by Nobel Under the company name The New Cycle Company to which also George Spaak was connected the product sold about 2 000 units in Sweden and 150 units in Great Britain Production remained until 1898 Although the general preference for circular pedal mechanisms became clear with time later bicycle models on the market would adopt its foot operated bicycle brakes while also employing its free wheeling hubs The Svea Velocipede is exhibited inter alia at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology and the Nordic Museum in Stockholm Sweden 7 Steam generator Edit With 12 knot the Ljungstrom steam engine sloop 1895 became the fastest steamboat around Stockholm archipelago By 1895 Fredrik Ljungstrom had developed and patented a steam generator an invention in which Alfred Nobel put particular interest especially its surface condenser invention Applied to a sloop with speed reaching 12 knot it became the fastest steamboat around Stockholm archipelago Also this invention was exported to England in 1896 along with Fredrik first catching the interest of the early Dunford amp Elliot in Newcastle upon Tyne Although the project s initial supporter Alfred Nobel died in 1896 in 1900 The Ljungstrom Engine Syndicate Limited was founded for the purposes in Newcastle to which the brothers relocated along with their families with George Spaak designated as CEO Despite production being halted again in 1902 several principles of the construction would prove important to the subsequent Ljungstrom steam engine After The Ljungstrom Engine Syndicate Limited Fredrik and Birger went on to work out the first automatic milking device in Sweden Beta 1901 which caught the interest of Alfred Nobel s nephew Ludvig Nobel 1868 1946 as well as Gustaf Laval at Laval AB Separator Fredrik would remain leading engineer in this venture Mjolkningsmaskin AB in Kungsholmen Stockholm until 1908 At the same time the brothers also developed methods for paraffin of mineral oil i e die casting of brass zinc and aluminium that would become well received The technology would however only prove successful for the market in 1922 Soon enough however it was evident that steam turbines would be the main focus for the brothers ventures Steam turbines EditMain article Ljungstrom turbine STAL turbine at the entrance of the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology A rather small but worthy representative of this turbine type acquired by the museum in 1993 It has been said that Fredrik Ljungstrom s insights in the steam power came to him already as a child at home observing how cuisine was prepared in the kitchen While late Alfred Nobel had continuously paid interest in the development of the steam turbines this invention were also endorsed figures such as Professor Aurel Stodola in 1907 Ljungstrom Steam Turbine Co Edit The turbine rotor for Ljungstrom steam turbine 50 MW electric generator circa 1932 The new steam turbine technology became the base for the company Ljungstrom steam turbine Co AB Ljungstroms Angturbin ALA founded in 1908 in Sweden that owned all the patents on this revolutionising turbine construction A workshop was first established on Kungsholmen in premises where a predecessor of Electrolux had recently been founded Next year the workshop was relocated to Liljeholmen Stockholm future sv Fargfabriken where the first turbine was finished in 1910 Already the first unit indicated world records performance By 1911 a significantly larger unit was produced and successfully tested with improvements attributed solely to Fredrik Ljungstrom s hand With also a new generator construction added by Fredrik the Ljungstrom turbine s defining features were now ready for the market The first turbine was sold to North Metropolitan Electric Power Supply Co for energy supply of the London County Council Tramways Despite being a prototype the unit would remain in service for 50 years until it was relocated for exhibition in the Science Museum in London Ljungstrom Swedish Turbine Manufacturing Co Edit Ljungstrom Swedish Turbine Manufacturing Co Swedish Svenska Turbinfabriks Aktiebolaget Ljungstrom STAL established in 1913 Main article STAL In 1913 the brothers cofounded a new company STAL Svenska Turbinfabriks Aktiebolaget Ljungstrom Swedish turbine manufacturing Co under the aegis of ALA Just some two years after the last artillery pieces ceased production in Finspang Ostergotland a former epicenter of the military industry of Sweden since Louis De Geer founded it in 1631 STAL acquired Finspang complete with the Finspang Castle along with surroundings territories and real estate erecting a new large scale factory complex at the site 8 The design studies and management facilities were installed inside the castle Mechanical engineer Karl Gustaf Karlson later Professor at Chalmers University of Technology was connected to the development This company handled the manufacturing and sales of complete steam turbine driven electric generators The turbine provided a 10 higher thermodynamic efficiency than previous constructions in addition to being more compact requiring less space STAL s solutions proved successful and with contracts such as with Siemens and General Electric its activities expanded into Europe and beyond both for stationary uses as well as for marine vessels Fredrik Ljungstrom was writes Anders Johnson in Turbines from Finspang from STAL to Siemens 1913 2013 not only a successful inventor but also skilled in management and leading the construction processes His modern work methods were reflected in a checklist of 56 questions to the engineers at STAL which also included aspects of safety and ergonomics Most reputed of these questions was nr 14 Is the construction unnecessarily hideous STAL was acquired by ASEA in 1916 as they wished to market complete packages with turbine driven electric generators The deal was carried out when significant owners and representatives where away on business trips in the turbulent Russian Empire unable to remain in communication The brothers then left the company but kept control over all the patents and manufacturing licenses for the Ljungstrom steam turbines within the company ALA STAL merged with De Laval in the 1950s under the name Stal Laval In the 1960s Fredrik Ljungstrom returned to operations to make significant renewed contributions to the technology the years before he died in 1964 After then having been managed by ABB the factories would eventually be acquired by Siemens 2003 under the name Siemens Industrial Turbomachinery AB 9 The technical solutions developed by the brothers at STAL remains employed all over the world with several world records throughout its history in terms of efficiency fuel savings size and power until present day In 2009 it was estimated some 328 units where equipped with Ljungstrom s technology some of which has consisted of the largest vessels ever produced from vehicles such as the London Underground or the word s largest supertanker Seawise Giant to a vast number of power plants Only in Sweden out of its 18 nuclear plants 16 were equipped with the turbines Furthermore increasingly since 2005 the technology has proved successful in solar power In 2008 almost 100 of all sun power plants where equipped by the Ljungstrom turbines 10 Steam turbine locomotives Edit Ljungstrom steam turbine locomotive 1921 adopted as Swedish Railways Turbine Locomotive Littera A 1922 Ljungstrom steam turbine locomotive at Stockholm Central Station 1922 The brothers also designed a number of steam turbine locomotives some of which were highly successful starting in 1917 One of the largest factory in the region was set up for the purpose in Gashaga Lidingo Stockholm in 1918 where the Ljungstrom brothers also worked out the Ljungstrom heat exchanger for their locomotives After successfully assembled this locomotive proved to be the strongest to ever have been produced On top of the increased power since the locomotive reused much of the steam from the turbine exits its permitted more far reaching distances without having to fill up water The first successful attempt for the Swedish Railways in March 1921 patented in July 1922 was a rather odd looking 12 tons machine Its three driving axles were located under the tender and the cab and boiler sat on unpowered wheels Tests on the designated distance Stockholm Gothenburg Western Main Line indicated 35 coal savings in comparison with the conventional solutions 11 The design with driving wheels on both the boiler carriage and the tender with separate turbines would eventually change The second design was a 2 8 0 similar to a successful freight design The locomotive was equipped with two wagons for the engine functions Several patents followed suit the next following years with Nydqvist amp Holm AB selected as licensed manufacturer Ljungstrom locomotives where employed for the distances Stockholm Krylbo and Stockholm Bollnas The turbine effect of this locomotive reached 1 470 kW 1 997 hp at 10 000 rpm with a maximum speed of 90 km h 12 In 1930 the 2000th Ljungstrom locomotive was rolled out of the factory of Nydqvist amp Holm AB TGOJ M3 47 M3t 71 13 This locomotive remained in use until 1931 when it was replaced along the electrification of the Swedish railways in addition to diesel electric engined locomotives Yet built from 1930 to 1936 by Nydqvist amp Holm Ljungstrom locomotives continued to replace conventional ones on the Grangesberg Oxelosund Railway No condenser was fitted as its complexity outweighed its thermodynamic advantages The wheels were driven by a jackshaft These engines were in use until 1953 when the line was electrified 14 The Beyer Peacock Quarterly Review July 1927 by Beyer Peacock and Company Ljungstrom turbine condenser locomotive on London Manchester Express near Mill Hill L M S Railway The enormous amount of experimental work made into the Ljungstrom locomotives also gained international attention One locomotive was delivered to the Argentine State Railway designated for the 800 km long distance between Tucuman and Santa Fe largely through desert with limited water access needs to which the Ljungstrom system was especially fitted This locomotives was equipped with a larger water tank and increased condenser capacity with turbine power reaching an effect of 1 290 kW 1 753 hp at 10 000 rpm decreasing the fuel savings up to 40 The locomotive remained in service until its disappearance during the Argentine Revolution 1966 1973 From England Beyer Peacock and Company sent two engineers to participate and supervise the progress in Stockholm The company eventually ordered license construction at Gorton Foundry of a copy of the Swedish Railways turbine locomotive SJ Littera A employed in London Midland and Scottish Railway Its design power was 2 000 hp at 10 500 rpm corresponding to a speed on the rails of 78 mph Design steam conditions were 300 lb sqin at 200 degC superheat It was employed for regular passenger service in lines from Derby to Manchester Birmingham and London with very considerable economies in coal and water consumption 15 16 Deutsche Reichsbahn had use for the technology especially in Bavaria It is to the Swedish engineer Ljungstrom that the transport world is indebted for the latest and most varied developments of the steam turbine railway locomotive His experiments have taken place over a number of years Sweden being a country deficient in coal is particularly interested in an increase in the thermal efficiency of the locomotive and in fuel economies Wonders of World Engineering part 19 6 July 1937 17 The old locomotive factory on Lidingo was demolished with dynamite in 1972 Three engines of the Ljungstrom type have been preserved in Sweden Two units 71 and 73 are exhibited by the Railway Museum of Grangesberg and the third 72 by the Swedish Railway Museum The one in Grangesberg is the world s only remaining steam turbine locomotive in function Ljungstrom M3t nr 71 manufactured in 1930 by Nydqvist amp Holm AB and renovated by the Locomotive Museum for the 125th anniversary of the Swedish Railways in June 1981 and again in 2014 financed by the Swedish National Heritage Board 18 19 Still world unique steam turbine locomotives with a power of 22 tons it is still Sweden s most powerful steam locomotive in funcion practical tests showed that it was able to transport 2 000 tons in 17 per mille elevation 20 Digital emulations has also been created for the 3D train simulator video game Trainz 21 22 Air preheaters Edit Ljungstrom regenerative heat exchanger circa 1930 Ljungstrom steam turbine locomotive with air preheater circa 1925 Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology Main article Ljungstrom air preheater Fredrik Lindstrom also invented an efficient air preheater which even in a modern utility boiler provides up to 20 percent of the total heat transfer in the boiler process but only represents 2 percent of the investment 23 One of Fredrik Ljungstroms first patents was a heat exchanger radiator acquired in 1896 Several years later the Ljungstrom air preheater innovation was a result of the factory in Lidingo with patent achieved in 1930 24 although an anecdote traces the inception to an air conditioning concern during a visit in the smoky premises of the Royal Swedish Opera in Stockholm in 1919 The factory and workshop activities and laboratories in Lidingo would remain throughout the 1920s with some 70 personnel In the 1930s it was used a film studio and was finally demolished in the 1970s to give space for new industry premises ASEA acquired a majority of the company in 1916 and Erik Sundblad was designated CEO Royalties were ceased in 1944 In 1995 it was estimated that the Ljungstrom air preheater had sold tens of thousands of units for in total some 20 billion dollars Shale oil extraction EditDuring the resource scarcity of World War II Fredrik Ljungstrom s innovative technology for shale oil extraction underground gasification by electrical energy called the Ljungstrom method provided a significant strategical impact for the Royal Swedish Navy and Air Force 3 Fredrik Ljungstrom obtained his last patent in this industry in 1954 The Ljungstrom fields outside Orebro with a war production of about 70 000 m3 were inactived after the war but with a possibility of reactivation in case of renewed need of domestic oil source While the project was initially supported by Vattenfall eventually Svenska Skifferolje AB SSAB was employed with maintaining the Ljungstrom fields which remained in active production until 1966 25 26 27 Naval engineering Edit Ljungstrom sailboat 1950 USPTO No 2107303 manufactured 8 February 8 1938 Fredrik Ljungstrom the yacht designer in Life magazine 1951 onboard Vingen XII the Wing XII wearing his mariner cap from the Lysekil Yacht Club Main articles Ljungstrom sailboat Ljungstrom rig and circular arc hull Fredrik Ljungstrom an enthusiastic sailor and keen member of the Royal Swedish Yacht Club made several inventions out of new ideas related to sailing boats The Ljungstrom sailboat with the circular arc hull and the Ljungstrom rig without a boom and double sail that can work as a spinnaker is named after Fredrik Ljungstrom 28 The history of the productions are represented at the Maritime Museum in Stockholm 29 He also experimented with a vibrationless yacht motor Other ventures EditThe transmission technology Spontaneous gear 1920 an automatic gear box developed by Fredrik Ljungstrom in the 1920s attracted attention on the Swedish market and several private cars were equipped with the system with positive results A new company was established with this purpose and Ljungstromsbilen Swedish The Ljungstrom Car Axel Wenner Gren took interest followed by Chrysler in the United States but both had to retreat shortly afterwards due to the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the subsequent Great Depression Still an invention of hydraulic gear saw success during World War II with royalties paid by the United States This gear was used for Vabis built railbuses as well as the Swedish railcars used in Scania Part of the other technology also moved on to the first Saab cars Although initially interested in aerospace engineering Fredrik drafted a flight machine project late 19th century applied aerodynamics were never among his main subjects of interest especially after having lost his son and pilot Lieutenant Einar Ljungstrom in an airplane crash in 1927 Despite this after World War II Ljungstrom s technology contributed to the first Swedish jet engine with STAL Dovern based in part on his technology developed by the company he founded Fredrik Ljungstrom become a well reputed figure in the 20th century technical industry in Sweden Together with his fellow at Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences Gustaf Dalen the two inventors once came late to a meeting going around town in their coach in enthusiastic discussions on new ideas Curt Nicolin praised the influence in an obituary on Fredrik Ljungstrom The works of Fredrik Ljungstrom are represented in the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology the Nordic Museum the Swedish Railway Museum the Maritime Museum the Nobel Museum and the Lidingo Museum among others Image gallery Edit Ljungstrom steam turbine locomotive prototype workshop and factory at Gashaga Lidingo Ljungstrom locomotive from the Wonder Book of Engineering Wonders 1931 Ljungstrom locomotives stationed at Railway Museum of Grangesberg Ljungstrom system equipped turbine locomotive M3t nr 71 at the Railway Museum of Grangesberg Details on M3t nr 71 Detail Turbinlokomotiv System Ljungstrom STAL turbine generator 1932 STAL turbine generator 1947 Ljungstrom radial turbine Main patent drawings for Ljungstrom heat exchanger USPTO No 1746598 1930 Ljungstrom Spontan Drive system 1928 Radial impeller of the Ljungstrom turbine 1910 1957 in Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci Milan Italy Ljungstrom air preheater in modern application 2010 Bibliography EditStudie over fartyg med formen bestamd av cirkelbagar och dess tillampning pa segelbarande motrofartyg och passagerarfartyg Stockholm Sveriges standardiseringskommission 1952 Unda Maris 1947 48 Tema Nordisk fiskebatbyggarekongress 1947 Sjofartsmuseet 1948 Cirkelbagsskrov Segel och motor 1939 nr 5 8 25 s Ljungstroms luftforvarmare Foredrag hallet vid Foreningens for kraft och bransleekonomi arsmote i Helsingfors den 27 April 1923 Helsingfors 1923 Ljungstroms turbinlokomotiv Stockholm 1922 The Development of the Ljungstrom Steam Turbine and Air Preheater by Dr Fredrik Ljungstrom Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers volume 160 issue 1 1 June 1949 30 Distinctions Edit Eponymous Birger and Fredrik Ljungstrom Commemorative Medal 1976 of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences Medal 1957 of the Swedish Rotor Machines designed by Swedish sculptor Leo Holmberg Depicting on one side Fredrik Ljungstrom on the other side Prometheus and Ariel figures of forethought and air STAL plaquette in bronze Depicting on one side Louis De Geer 1587 1652 and Finspang Castle on the other side STAL Swedish Svenska Turbinfabriks Aktiebolaget Ljungstrom Produced by AB Sporrong amp Co From the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology Orders Edit Sweden Knight of the Order of the Polar Star 1943 Sweden Knight 1st class of the Order of Vasa 1927 France Grand Cross of the National Order of Merit 1963 Academic Edit Honorary doctorate of the Royal Institute of Technology 1944 Honorary doctorate of the Dresden University of Technology 1928 Awards Edit KTH Great Prize of the Royal Institute of Technology 1948 31 James Watt International Gold Medal of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1949 32 International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark Ljungstrom Air Preheater by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1995 Clason Medal of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences 1943 Arnberg Prize from the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences 1944 Grashof Medal of the Association of German Engineers 1956 Honorary Plaque of the Swedish Inventors Association 1955 Honorary Fellow of the Swedish Inventors Association 1961 Silver Medal of the Exposition Universelle in Paris for the Svea Velocipede 1900 Gold Medal of the General Art and Industrial Exposition of Stockholm for the Svea Velocipede 1897 Fellowships Edit Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences 1940 Fellowship since 1924 Fellowship of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences 1945 Honorary Membership of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1950 33 Honorary Fellowship of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1950 Honorary Fellowship of the Swedish Association of Inventors 1961 Eponyms Edit Permanent exhibition at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology 1995 Ljungstrom Prize of the Swedish National Mechanics Association 1971 Birger and Fredrik Ljungstrom Commemorative Medal of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences 1976 Rotor Medal of Svenska Rotor Maskiner 1957 Birger and Fredrik Ljungstrom room at the Finspang Castle 34 The International Ljungstrom Air Preheater Conference in Japan 1962 References Edit Svenska uppfinnare och innovatorer Archived from the original on 2016 11 30 Retrieved 2016 06 17 Ljungstromare genom tiderna a b Fredrik Ljungstrom Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 10 20 Retrieved 2016 06 14 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Siemens 100 ar sit ab leon se Archived from the original on 2013 09 11 Nobel den gatfulle Alfred hans varld och hans pris 2019 Norstedts by Ingrid Carlberg ISBN 9789113069395 Trampa runt Nej upp och ner Minnesmaskinen 28 June 2011 686 Teknisk Tidskrift Argang 90 1960 Siemens Industrial Turbomachinery AB Har stod industrins vagga www sit ab se Archived from the original on 2011 05 27 Froberg Jonas 18 April 2008 Angturbiner stralande affar for Finspang Svenska Dagbladet En bild berattar Ett unikt anglok byggs i Gashaga Alla Sveriges anglok ellok diesellok vaxellok private lok privatbanelok Angturbinlokomotivets utveckling Locomotive museum Grangesberg English version Archived from the original on 2020 04 07 Retrieved 2019 03 16 A British Ljungstrom Turbine Locomotive Railway Wonders of the World The Beyer Ljungstrom Turbine Locomotive The Turbine Locomotive Wonders of World Engineering Information enligt Lokmuseet i Grangesberg 300 000 kronor till rust av turbinlok 13 June 2014 1980 Archived from the original on 2007 09 23 Retrieved 2017 05 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Angturbinlok TGOJ M3t 71 72 och 73 Svenska 3D Tag Forum Swedish 3D steam locos for Trainz developed by JOComms Jocomms webs com 2017 01 12 Retrieved 2022 04 17 The Ljungstrom Air Preheater 1920 An International Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark PDF PDF Svenska Mekanisters Riksforening American Society of Mechanical Engineers Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2009 01 10 Patent USPTO No 1746598 11 February 1930 Omradeshistoria 1218 Teknisk Tidskrift Argang 75 1945 https www gorek se skriftx ssab pdf bare URL PDF Ljungstromare genom tiderna Yachting 1 77 Ritning Ljungstrom Fredrik 1949 The Development of the Ljungstrom Steam Turbine and Air Preheater Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers 160 211 223 doi 10 1243 PIME PROC 1949 160 023 02 Samtliga pristagare Archived 2009 12 06 at the Wayback Machine kth se retrieved on 2009 02 05 James Watt International Medal Recipients Archived 2009 03 19 at the Wayback Machine imeche org retrieved on 2009 02 05 Svenska Dagbladet 19 March 1950 p 3 1910 Birger and Fredrik Ljungstrom Finspangs Slott Archived from the original on 2020 11 26 Retrieved 2017 05 02 Literature EditTurbines from Finspang from STAL to Siemens 1913 2013 2012 by Anders Johnson Informationsforlaget and Siemens Industrial Turbomachinery ISBN 9789177366300 Pionjarer vid ritbordet Enskede Bat amp skargard 2000 ISBN 91 970902 6 3 Fredrik Ljungstrom 1875 1964 Uppfinnare och inspirator 1999 by Olof Ljungstrom Sveriges Mekanisters Riksforening ISBN 91 630 7639 X STAL turbin till Tekniska Museet Daedalus 1994 by Carl Goran Nilson Nar uppfinnarna var tidens hjaltar 1994 Popular Historia Lund 1991 Borje Isakson ISSN 1102 0822 1994 5 s 48 51 lt https popularhistoria se teknik uppfinningar uppfinnare nar uppfinnarna var tidens hjaltar gt Angturbinlokomotivens utveckling Teknik for alla 1943 lt https www historiskt nu rullande turbinlok turbinl utv html gt Svenska snilleblixtar Isakson Borje 1939 forfattare Johansson George Stockholm Natur amp Kultur 1994 ISBN 91 27 03899 8 Birger and Fredrik Ljungstrom inventors 1955 by Sven A Hansson 1907 1996 Finsponga bilder en skrift utgiven av Svenska Turbinfabriks Aktiebolaget Ljungstrom 1952 by sv Torsten AlthinExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fredrik Ljungstrom Biography at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology website Archived 2016 07 03 at the Wayback Machine STAL company page at the Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology website Archived 2016 09 09 at the Wayback Machine Photo collection of Ljungstrom steam turbine locomotives at the Railway Museum of Grangesberg Utvecklingen av Ljungstroms angturbin och luftforvarmare Tekn dr Fredrik Ljungstrom Fiskebackskil Ljungstrom Prize of the Swedish National Mechanics Association Archived 2018 02 21 at the Wayback Machine sv SRM 100 year jubilee the story about the Ljungstrom brothers Free Patents Online Fredrik Ljungstrom LJUNGSTROM Corporate website Pupular Historia Swedish 1 Swedish Ljungstrom mer an bara batar Ljungstrom more than just boats Maritime Museum of Stockholm The Meccano Magazine July 1927Videos Edit Swedish Railway Museum exhibition Paramountjournalen October 1929 TGOJ M3t 71 pulling heavy timber in Sweden Model of Beyer Ljungstrom steam turbine locomotive on model railway TGOJ Litt M3t 72 Steam turbin locomotive is pulled out of the sheed for the first time in along time LJUNGSTROM Air Preheater APH amp Gas gas Heater GGH Power Plant Overview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fredrik Ljungstrom amp oldid 1142440274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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