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Wikipedia

Stirling engine

A Stirling engine is a heat engine that is operated by the cyclic compression and expansion of air or other gas (the working fluid) between different temperatures, resulting in a net conversion of heat energy to mechanical work.[1][2]

A model of a Stirling engine showing its simplicity. Unlike the steam engine or internal combustion engine, it has no valves or timing train. The heat source (not shown) would be placed under the brass cylinder.

More specifically, the Stirling engine is a closed-cycle regenerative heat engine, with a permanent gaseous working fluid. Closed-cycle, in this context, means a thermodynamic system in which the working fluid is permanently contained within the system. Regenerative describes the use of a specific type of internal heat exchanger and thermal store, known as the regenerator. Strictly speaking, the inclusion of the regenerator is what differentiates a Stirling engine from other closed-cycle hot air engines.[3]

In the Stirling engine, a gas is heated and expanded by energy supplied from outside the engine's interior space (cylinder). It is then shunted to a different location within the engine, where it is cooled and compressed. A piston (or pistons) move the gas to the correct places within the engine, at the correct time in the cycle, and extracts mechanical power from it. The gas oscillates between these heating and cooling spaces, changing temperature and pressure as it goes. A unique feature is the regenerator, which acts as a temporary heat store by retaining heat within the machine rather than dumping it into the heat sink, thereby increasing its efficiency.

The heat is supplied from the outside, so the hot area of the engine can be warmed with any external heat source. Similarly, the cooler part of the engine can be maintained by an external heat sink, such as running water or air flow. The gas is permanently retained in the engine, allowing a gas with the most-suitable properties to be used, such as helium or hydrogen. There are no intake and no exhaust gas flows so the machine is practically silent.

The machine is reversible so that if the shaft is turned by an external power source a temperature difference will develop across the machine; in this way it acts as a heat pump.

The Stirling engine was invented by Scotsman Robert Stirling[4] in 1816 as an industrial prime mover to rival the steam engine, and its practical use was largely confined to low-power domestic applications for over a century.[5]

Contemporary investment in renewable energy, especially solar energy, has given rise to its application within concentrated solar power and as a heat pump.

History edit

 
Illustration from Robert Stirling's 1816 patent application of the air engine design that later came to be known as the Stirling Engine

Early hot air engines edit

Robert Stirling is considered one of the fathers of hot air engines, notwithstanding some earlier predecessors—notably Guillaume Amontons,[6] who succeeded in building, in 1699, the first working hot air engine.[7]

Amontons was later followed by Sir George Cayley.[8] This engine type was of those in which the fire is enclosed, and fed by air pumped in beneath the grate in sufficient quantity to maintain combustion, while by far the largest portion of the air enters above the fire, to be heated and expanded; the whole, together with the products of combustion, then acts on the piston, and passes through the working cylinder; and the operation being one of simple mixture only, no heating surface of metal is required, the air to be heated being brought into immediate contact with the fire.[citation needed]

Stirling came up with a first air engine in 1816.[9] The principle of the Stirling Air Engine differs from that of Sir George Cayley (1807), in which the air is forced through the furnace and exhausted, whereas in Stirling's engine the air works in a closed circuit. The inventor devoted most of his attention to that.[citation needed]

A 2-horsepower (1.5 kW) engine, built in 1818 for pumping water at an Ayrshire quarry, continued to work for some time until a careless attendant allowed the heater to become overheated. This experiment proved to the inventor that, owing to the low working pressure obtainable, the engine could only be adapted to low power for which there was, at that time, no demand.[citation needed]

The Stirling 1816 patent[10] was also about an "economiser," which is the predecessor of the regenerator. In this patent (# 4081) he describes the "economiser" technology and several applications where such technology can be used. Out of them came a new arrangement for a hot air engine.[citation needed]

With his brother James, Stirling patented a second hot air engine in 1827.[11] They inverted the design so that the hot ends of the displacers were underneath the machinery, and they added a compressed air pump so the air within could be increased in pressure to around 20 standard atmospheres (2,000 kPa).[citation needed]

The Stirling brothers were followed shortly after (1828) by Parkinson & Crossley[12] and Arnott[13] in 1829.[citation needed]

These precursors, including Ericsson,[14] have brought to the world the hot air engine technology and its enormous advantages over the steam engine.[citation needed] Each came with his own specific technology, and although the Stirling engine and the Parkinson & Crossley engines were quite similar, Robert Stirling distinguished himself by inventing the regenerator.[citation needed]

Parkinson and Crossley introduced the principle of using air of greater density than that of the atmosphere and so obtained an engine of greater power in the same compass. James Stirling followed this same idea when he built the famous Dundee engine.[15]

The Stirling patent of 1827 was the base of the Stirling third patent of 1840.[16] The changes from the 1827 patent were minor but essential, and this third patent led to the Dundee engine.[17]

James Stirling presented his engine to the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1845, [18] the first engine of this kind which, after various modifications, was efficiently constructed and heated, had a cylinder of 30 centimetres (12 inches) in diameter, with a length of stroke of 60 centimetres (2 ft), and made 40 strokes or revolutions in a minute (40 rpm). This engine moved all the machinery at the Dundee Foundry Company's works for eight or ten months, and was previously found capable of raising 320,000 kg (700,000 lbs) 60 cm (2 ft) in a minute, a power of approximately 16 kilowatts (21 horsepower).[citation needed] Finding this power insufficient for their works, the Dundee Foundry Company erected the second engine with a cylinder of 40 centimetres (16 inches) in diameter, a stroke of 1.2 metres (4 feet), and making 28 strokes in a minute. When this engine had been in continuous operation for over two years it had not only performed the work of the foundry in the most satisfactory manner but had been tested (by a friction brake on a third mover) to the extent of lifting nearly 687 tonnes (1,500,000 pounds), approximately 34 kilowatts (45 horsepower).[citation needed]

Invention and early development edit

The Stirling engine (or Stirling's air engine as it was known at the time) was invented and patented in 1816.[19] It followed earlier attempts at making an air engine but was probably the first put to practical use when, in 1818, an engine built by Stirling was employed pumping water in a quarry.[20] The main subject of Stirling's original patent was a heat exchanger, which he called an "economiser" for its enhancement of fuel economy in a variety of applications. The patent also described in detail the employment of one form of the economiser in his unique closed-cycle air engine design[21] in which application it is now generally known as a "regenerator". Subsequent development by Robert Stirling and his brother James, an engineer, resulted in patents for various improved configurations of the original engine including pressurization, which by 1843, had sufficiently increased power output to drive all the machinery at a Dundee iron foundry.[22]

A paper presented by James Stirling in June 1845 to the Institution of Civil Engineers stated that his aims were not only to save fuel but also to create a safer alternative to the steam engines of the time,[23] whose boilers frequently exploded, causing many injuries and fatalities.[24][25] This has, however, been disputed.[26]

The need for Stirling engines to run at very high temperatures to maximize power and efficiency exposed limitations in the materials of the day, and the few engines that were built in those early years suffered unacceptably frequent failures (albeit with far less disastrous consequences than boiler explosions).[27] For example, the Dundee foundry engine was replaced by a steam engine after three hot cylinder failures in four years.[28]

Later 19th century edit

 
A typical late nineteenth/early twentieth-century water-pumping engine by the Rider-Ericsson Engine Company

Subsequent to the replacement of the Dundee foundry engine there is no record of the Stirling brothers having any further involvement with air engine development, and the Stirling engine never again competed with steam as an industrial scale power source. (Steam boilers were becoming safer, e.g. the Hartford Steam Boiler[29] and steam engines more efficient, thus presenting less of a target for rival prime movers). However, beginning about 1860, smaller engines of the Stirling/hot air type were produced in substantial numbers for applications in which reliable sources of low to medium power were required, such as pumping air for church organs or raising water.[30] These smaller engines generally operated at lower temperatures so as not to tax available materials, and so were relatively inefficient. Their selling point was that unlike steam engines, they could be operated safely by anybody capable of managing a fire. The 1906 Rider-Ericsson Engine Co. catalog claimed that "any gardener or ordinary domestic can operate these engines and no licensed or experienced engineer is required". Several types remained in production beyond the end of the century, but apart from a few minor mechanical improvements the design of the Stirling engine in general stagnated during this period.[31]

20th-century revival edit

 
Philips MP1002CA Stirling generator of 1951

During the early part of the 20th century, the role of the Stirling engine as a "domestic motor"[32] was gradually taken over by electric motors and small internal combustion engines. By the late 1930s, it was largely forgotten, only produced for toys and a few small ventilating fans.[33]

Around that time, Philips was seeking to expand sales of its radios into parts of the world where grid electricity and batteries were not consistently available. Philips' management decided that offering a low-power portable generator would facilitate such sales and asked a group of engineers at the company's research lab in Eindhoven to evaluate alternative ways of achieving this aim. After a systematic comparison of various prime movers, the team decided to go forward with the Stirling engine, citing its quiet operation (both audibly and in terms of radio interference) and ability to run on a variety of heat sources (common lamp oil – "cheap and available everywhere" – was favored).[34] They were also aware that, unlike steam and internal combustion engines, virtually no serious development work had been carried out on the Stirling engine for many years and asserted that modern materials and know-how should enable great improvements.[35]

By 1951, the 180/200 W generator set designated MP1002CA (known as the "Bungalow set") was ready for production and an initial batch of 250 was planned, but soon it became clear that they could not be made at a competitive price. Additionally, the advent of transistor radios and their much lower power requirements meant that the original reason for the set was disappearing. Approximately 150 of these sets were eventually produced.[36] Some found their way into university and college engineering departments around the world, giving generations of students a valuable introduction to the Stirling engine; a letter dated March 1961 from Research and Control Instruments Ltd. London WC1 to North Devon Technical College, offering "remaining stocks... to institutions such as yourselves... at a special price of £75 net".[citation needed]

In parallel with the Bungalow set, Philips developed experimental Stirling engines for a wide variety of applications and continued to work in the field until the late 1970s, but only achieved commercial success with the "reversed Stirling engine" cryocooler. They filed a large number of patents and amassed a wealth of information which they licensed to other companies and which formed the basis of much of the development work in the modern era.[37]

In 1996, the Swedish navy commissioned three Gotland-class submarines. On the surface, these boats are propelled by marine diesel engines; however, when submerged they use a Stirling-driven generator developed by Swedish shipbuilder Kockums to recharge batteries and provide electrical power for propulsion.[38] A supply of liquid oxygen is carried to support burning of diesel fuel to power the engine. Stirling engines are also fitted to Swedish Södermanland-class submarines, the Archer-class submarines in service in Singapore, and the Japanese Sōryū-class submarines, with the engines license-built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries. In a submarine application, the Stirling engine offers the advantage of being exceptionally quiet when running.[citation needed]

21st-century developments edit

By the turn of the 21st century, Stirling engines were used in the dish version of Concentrated Solar Power systems. A mirrored dish similar to a very large satellite dish directs and concentrates sunlight onto a thermal receiver, which absorbs and collects the heat and using a fluid transfers it into the Stirling engine. The resulting mechanical power is then used to run a generator or alternator to produce electricity.[39]

The core component of micro combined heat and power (CHP) units can be formed by a Stirling cycle engine, as they are more efficient and safer than a comparable steam engine. By 2003, CHP units were being commercially installed in domestic applications.[40]

In 2013, an article was published about scaling laws of free-piston Stirling engines based on six characteristic dimensionless groups.[41]

Name and classification edit

 
Stirling engine running

Robert Stirling patented the first practical example of a closed-cycle hot air engine in 1816, and it was suggested by Fleeming Jenkin as early as 1884 that all such engines should therefore generically be called Stirling engines. This naming proposal found little favour, and the various types on the market continued to be known by the name of their individual designers or manufacturers, e.g., Rider's, Robinson's, or Heinrici's (hot) air engine. In the 1940s, the Philips company was seeking a suitable name for its own version of the 'air engine', which by that time had been tested with working fluids other than air, and decided upon 'Stirling engine' in April 1945.[42] However, nearly thirty years later, Graham Walker still had cause to bemoan the fact such terms as hot air engine remained interchangeable with Stirling engine, which itself was applied widely and indiscriminately,[43] a situation that continues.[44]

Like the steam engine, the Stirling engine is traditionally classified as an external combustion engine, as all heat transfers to and from the working fluid take place through a solid boundary (heat exchanger) thus isolating the combustion process and any contaminants it may produce from the working parts of the engine. This contrasts with an internal combustion engine, where heat input is by combustion of a fuel within the body of the working fluid. Most of the many possible implementations of the Stirling engine fall into the category of reciprocating piston engine.[citation needed]

Theory edit

 
A pressure/volume graph of the idealized Stirling cycle.

The idealised Stirling cycle consists of four thermodynamic processes acting on the working fluid:

  1. Isothermal expansion. The expansion-space and associated heat exchanger are maintained at a constant high temperature, and the gas undergoes near-isothermal expansion absorbing heat from the hot source.
  2. Constant-volume (known as isovolumetric or isochoric) heat-removal. The gas is passed through the regenerator, where it cools, transferring heat to the regenerator for use in the next cycle.
  3. Isothermal compression. The compression space and associated heat exchanger are maintained at a constant low temperature so the gas undergoes near-isothermal compression rejecting heat to the cold sink
  4. Constant-volume (known as isovolumetric or isochoric) heat-addition. The gas passes back through the regenerator where it recovers much of the heat transferred in process 2, heating up on its way to the expansion space.

The engine is designed so the working gas is generally compressed in the colder portion of the engine and expanded in the hotter portion resulting in a net conversion of heat into work.[2] An internal regenerative heat exchanger increases the Stirling engine's thermal efficiency compared to simpler hot air engines lacking this feature.

The Stirling engine uses the temperature difference between its hot end and cold end to establish a cycle of a fixed mass of gas, heated and expanded, and cooled and compressed, thus converting thermal energy into mechanical energy. The greater the temperature difference between the hot and cold sources, the greater the thermal efficiency. The maximum theoretical efficiency is equivalent to that of the Carnot cycle, but the efficiency of real engines is less than this value because of friction and other losses.[citation needed]

Since the Stirling engine is a closed cycle, it contains a fixed mass of gas called the "working fluid", most commonly air, hydrogen or helium. In normal operation, the engine is sealed and no gas enters or leaves; no valves are required, unlike other types of piston engines. The Stirling engine, like most heat engines, cycles through four main processes: cooling, compression, heating, and expansion. This is accomplished by moving the gas back and forth between hot and cold heat exchangers, often with a regenerator between the heater and cooler. The hot heat exchanger is in thermal contact with an external heat source, such as a fuel burner, and the cold heat exchanger is in thermal contact with an external heat sink, such as air fins. A change in gas temperature causes a corresponding change in gas pressure, while the motion of the piston makes the gas alternately expand and compress.[citation needed]

The gas follows the behaviour described by the gas laws that describe how a gas's pressure, temperature, and volume are related. When the gas is heated, the pressure rises (because it is in a sealed chamber) and this pressure then acts on the power piston to produce a power stroke. When the gas is cooled the pressure drops and this drop means that the piston needs to do less work to compress the gas on the return stroke. The difference in work between the strokes yields a net positive power output.[citation needed]

When one side of the piston is open to the atmosphere, the operation is slightly different. As the sealed volume of working gas comes in contact with the hot side, it expands, doing work on both the piston and on the atmosphere. When the working gas contacts the cold side, its pressure drops below atmospheric pressure and the atmosphere pushes on the piston and does work on the gas.[citation needed]

Components edit

 
Cut-away diagram of a rhombic drive beta configuration Stirling engine design:
  1: Hot cylinder wall
  2: Cold cylinder wall
  3: Coolant inlet and outlet pipes
  4: Thermal insulation separating the two cylinder ends
  5: Displacer piston
  6: Power piston
  7: Linkage crank and flywheels
Not shown: Heat source and heat sinks. In this design the displacer piston is constructed without a purpose-built regenerator.

As a consequence of closed-cycle operation, the heat driving a Stirling engine must be transmitted from a heat source to the working fluid by heat exchangers and finally to a heat sink. A Stirling engine system has at least one heat source, one heat sink and up to five heat exchangers. Some types may combine or dispense with some of these.[citation needed]

Heat source edit

 
Point focus parabolic mirror with Stirling engine at its centre and its solar tracker at Plataforma Solar de Almería (PSA) in Spain.

The heat source may be provided by the combustion of a fuel and, since the combustion products do not mix with the working fluid and hence do not come into contact with the internal parts of the engine, a Stirling engine can run on fuels that would damage other engines types' internals, such as landfill gas, which may contain siloxane that could deposit abrasive silicon dioxide in conventional engines.[45]

Other suitable heat sources include concentrated solar energy, geothermal energy, nuclear energy, waste heat and bioenergy. If solar power is used as a heat source, regular solar mirrors and solar dishes may be utilised. The use of Fresnel lenses and mirrors has also been advocated, for example in planetary surface exploration.[46] Solar powered Stirling engines are increasingly popular as they offer an environmentally sound option for producing power while some designs are economically attractive in development projects.[47]

Heat exchangers edit

Designing Stirling engine heat exchangers is a balance between high heat transfer with low viscous pumping losses, and low dead space (unswept internal volume). Engines that operate at high powers and pressures require that heat exchangers on the hot side be made of alloys that retain considerable strength at high temperatures and that don't corrode or creep.[citation needed]

In small, low power engines the heat exchangers may simply consist of the walls of the respective hot and cold chambers, but where larger powers are required a greater surface area is needed to transfer sufficient heat. Typical implementations are internal and external fins or multiple small bore tubes for the hot side, and a cooler using a liquid (like water) for the cool side.[citation needed]

Regenerator edit

In a Stirling engine, the regenerator is an internal heat exchanger and temporary heat store placed between the hot and cold spaces such that the working fluid passes through it first in one direction then the other, taking heat from the fluid in one direction, and returning it in the other. It can be as simple as metal mesh or foam, and benefits from high surface area, high heat capacity, low conductivity and low flow friction.[48] Its function is to retain within the system that heat which would otherwise be exchanged with the environment at temperatures intermediate to the maximum and minimum cycle temperatures,[49] thus enabling the thermal efficiency of the cycle (though not of any practical engine[50]) to approach the limiting Carnot efficiency.[citation needed]

The primary effect of regeneration in a Stirling engine is to increase the thermal efficiency by 'recycling' internal heat which would otherwise pass through the engine irreversibly. As a secondary effect, increased thermal efficiency yields a higher power output from a given set of hot and cold end heat exchangers. These usually limit the engine's heat throughput. In practice this additional power may not be fully realized as the additional "dead space" (unswept volume) and pumping loss inherent in practical regenerators reduces the potential efficiency gains from regeneration.[citation needed]

The design challenge for a Stirling engine regenerator is to provide sufficient heat transfer capacity without introducing too much additional internal volume ('dead space') or flow resistance. These inherent design conflicts are one of many factors that limit the efficiency of practical Stirling engines. A typical design is a stack of fine metal wire meshes, with low porosity to reduce dead space, and with the wire axes perpendicular to the gas flow to reduce conduction in that direction and to maximize convective heat transfer.[51]

The regenerator is the key component invented by Robert Stirling, and its presence distinguishes a true Stirling engine from any other closed-cycle hot air engine. Many small 'toy' Stirling engines, particularly low-temperature difference (LTD) types, do not have a distinct regenerator component and might be considered hot air engines; however, a small amount of regeneration is provided by the surface of the displacer itself and the nearby cylinder wall, or similarly the passage connecting the hot and cold cylinders of an alpha configuration engine.[citation needed]

Heat sink edit

The larger the temperature difference between the hot and cold sections of a Stirling engine, the greater the engine's efficiency. The heat sink is typically the environment the engine operates in, at ambient temperature. In the case of medium- to high-power engines, a radiator is required to transfer the heat from the engine to the ambient air. Marine engines have the advantage of using cool ambient sea, lake, or river water, which is typically cooler than ambient air. In the case of combined heat and power systems, the engine's cooling water is used directly or indirectly for heating purposes, raising efficiency.[citation needed]

Alternatively, heat may be supplied at ambient temperature and the heat sink maintained at a lower temperature by such means as cryogenic fluid (see Liquid nitrogen economy) or iced water.[citation needed]

Displacer edit

The displacer is a special-purpose piston, used in Beta and Gamma type Stirling engines, to move the working gas back and forth between the hot and cold heat exchangers. Depending on the type of engine design, the displacer may or may not be sealed to the cylinder; i.e., it may be a loose fit within the cylinder, allowing the working gas to pass around it as it moves to occupy the part of the cylinder beyond. The Alpha type engine has a high stress on the hot side, that's why so few inventors started to use a hybrid piston for that side. The hybrid piston has a sealed part as a normal Alpha type engine, but it has a connected displacer part with smaller diameter as the cylinder around that. The compression ratio is a bit smaller than in the original Alpha type engines, but the stress factor is pretty low on the sealed parts.[citation needed]

Configurations edit

The three major types of Stirling engines are distinguished by the way they move the air between the hot and cold areas:[citation needed]

  1. The alpha configuration has two power pistons, one in a hot cylinder, one in a cold cylinder, and the gas is driven between the two by the pistons; it is typically in a V-formation with the pistons joined at the same point on a crankshaft.
  2. The beta configuration has a single cylinder with a hot end and a cold end, containing a power piston and a 'displacer' that drives the gas between the hot and cold ends. It is typically used with a rhombic drive to achieve the phase difference between the displacer and power pistons, but they can be joined 90 degrees out of phase on a crankshaft.
  3. The gamma configuration has two cylinders: one containing a displacer, with a hot and a cold end, and one for the power piston; they are joined to form a single space, so the cylinders have equal pressure; the pistons are typically in parallel and joined 90 degrees out of phase on a crankshaft.

Alpha edit

 
Alpha-type Stirling engine. There are two cylinders. The expansion cylinder (red) is maintained at a high temperature while the compression cylinder (blue) is cooled. The passage between the two cylinders contains the regenerator

An alpha Stirling contains two power pistons in separate cylinders, one hot and one cold. The hot cylinder is situated inside the high-temperature heat exchanger and the cold cylinder is situated inside the low-temperature heat exchanger. This type of engine has a high power-to-volume ratio but has technical problems because of the usually high temperature of the hot piston and the durability of its seals.[52] In practice, this piston usually carries a large insulating head to move the seals away from the hot zone at the expense of some additional dead space. The crank angle has a major effect on efficiency and the best angle frequently must be found experimentally. An angle of 90° frequently locks.[citation needed]

A four-step description of the process is as follows:

  1. Most of the working gas is in the hot cylinder and has more contact with the hot cylinder's walls. This results in overall heating of the gas. Its pressure increases and the gas expands. Because the hot cylinder is at its maximum volume and the cold cylinder is at mid stroke (partial volume), the volume of the system is increased by expansion into the cold cylinder.
  2. The system is at its maximum volume and more gas has contact with the cold cylinder. This cools the gas, lowering its pressure. Because of flywheel momentum or other piston pairs on the same shaft, the hot cylinder begins an upstroke reducing the volume of the system.
  3. Almost all the gas is now in the cold cylinder and cooling continues. This continues to reduce the pressure of the gas and cause contraction. Because the hot cylinder is at minimum volume and the cold cylinder is at its maximum volume, the volume of the system is further reduced by compression of the cold cylinder inwards.
  4. The system is at its minimum volume and the gas has greater contact with the hot cylinder. The volume of the system increases by expansion of the hot cylinder.

Beta edit

 
Beta-type Stirling engine, with only one cylinder, hot at one end and cold at the other. A loose-fitting displacer shunts the air between the hot and cold ends of the cylinder. A power piston at the open end of the cylinder drives the flywheel

A beta Stirling has a single power piston arranged within the same cylinder on the same shaft as a displacer piston. The displacer piston is a loose fit and does not extract any power from the expanding gas but only serves to shuttle the working gas between the hot and cold heat exchangers. When the working gas is pushed to the hot end of the cylinder it expands and pushes the power piston. When it is pushed to the cold end of the cylinder it contracts and the momentum of the machine, usually enhanced by a flywheel, pushes the power piston the other way to compress the gas. Unlike the alpha type, the beta type avoids the technical problems of hot moving seals, as the power piston is not in contact with the hot gas.[53]

  1. Power piston (dark grey) has compressed the gas, the displacer piston (light grey) has moved so that most of the gas is adjacent to the hot heat exchanger.
  2. The heated gas increases in pressure and pushes the power piston to the farthest limit of the power stroke.
  3. The displacer piston now moves, shunting the gas to the cold end of the cylinder.
  4. The cooled gas is now compressed by the flywheel momentum. This takes less energy, since its pressure drops when it is cooled.

Other types edit

 
Top view of two rotating displacers powering the horizontal piston. Regenerators and radiator removed for clarity

Other Stirling configurations continue to interest engineers and inventors.[citation needed]

  • The rotary Stirling engine seeks to convert power from the Stirling cycle directly into torque, similar to the rotary combustion engine. No practical engine has yet been built but a number of concepts, models and patents have been produced, such as the Quasiturbine engine.[54]
  • A hybrid between piston and rotary configuration is a double-acting engine. This design rotates the displacers on either side of the power piston. In addition to giving great design variability in the heat transfer area, this layout eliminates all but one external seal on the output shaft and one internal seal on the piston. Also, both sides can be highly pressurized as they balance against each other.[citation needed]
  • Another alternative is the Fluidyne engine (or Fluidyne heat pump), which uses hydraulic pistons to implement the Stirling cycle. The work produced by a Fluidyne engine goes into pumping the liquid. In its simplest form, the engine contains a working gas, a liquid, and two non-return valves.[citation needed]
  • The Ringbom engine concept published in 1907 has no rotary mechanism or linkage for the displacer. This is instead driven by a small auxiliary piston, usually a thick displacer rod, with the movement limited by stops.[55][56]
  • The engineer Andy Ross invented a two-cylinder Stirling engine (positioned at 0°, not 90°) connected using a special yoke.[57][promotion?]
  • The Franchot engine is a double-acting engine invented by Charles-Louis-Félix Franchot in the nineteenth century. In a double-acting engine, the pressure of the working fluid acts on both sides of the piston. One of the simplest forms of a double-acting machine, the Franchot engine consists of two pistons and two cylinders, and acts like two separate alpha machines. In the Franchot engine, each piston acts in two gas phases, which makes more efficient use of the mechanical components than a single-acting alpha machine. However, a disadvantage of this machine is that one connecting rod must have a sliding seal at the hot side of the engine, which is difficult when dealing with high pressures and temperatures.[58]

Free-piston engines edit

 
Various free-piston Stirling configurations... F. "free cylinder", G. Fluidyne, H. "double-acting" Stirling (typically 4 cylinders).

Free-piston Stirling engines include those with liquid pistons and those with diaphragms as pistons. In a free-piston device, energy may be added or removed by an electrical linear alternator, pump or other coaxial device. This avoids the need for a linkage, and reduces the number of moving parts. In some designs, friction and wear are nearly eliminated by the use of non-contact gas bearings or very precise suspension through planar springs.[citation needed]

Four basic steps in the cycle of a free-piston Stirling engine are:[citation needed]

  1. The power piston is pushed outwards by the expanding gas thus doing work. Gravity plays no role in the cycle.
  2. The gas volume in the engine increases and therefore the pressure reduces, which causes a pressure difference across the displacer rod to force the displacer towards the hot end. When the displacer moves, the piston is almost stationary and therefore the gas volume is almost constant. This step results in the constant volume cooling process, which reduces the pressure of the gas.
  3. The reduced pressure now arrests the outward motion of the piston and it begins to accelerate towards the hot end again and by its own inertia, compresses the now cold gas, which is mainly in the cold space.
  4. As the pressure increases, a point is reached where the pressure differential across the displacer rod becomes large enough to begin to push the displacer rod (and therefore also the displacer) towards the piston and thereby collapsing the cold space and transferring the cold, compressed gas towards the hot side in an almost constant volume process. As the gas arrives in the hot side the pressure increases and begins to move the piston outwards to initiate the expansion step as explained in (1).

In the early 1960s, William T. Beale of Ohio University located in Athens, Ohio, invented a free piston version of the Stirling engine to overcome the difficulty of lubricating the crank mechanism.[59] While the invention of the basic free piston Stirling engine is generally attributed to Beale, independent inventions of similar types of engines were made by E.H. Cooke-Yarborough and C. West at the Harwell Laboratories of the UK AERE.[60] G.M. Benson also made important early contributions and patented many novel free-piston configurations.[61][62]

The first known mention of a Stirling cycle machine using freely moving components is a British patent disclosure in 1876.[63] This machine was envisaged as a refrigerator (i.e., the reversed Stirling cycle). The first consumer product to utilize a free piston Stirling device was a portable refrigerator manufactured by Twinbird Corporation of Japan and offered in the US by Coleman in 2004.[citation needed]

Flat engines edit

 
Cutaway of the flat Stirling engine: 10: Hot cylinder. 11: A volume of hot cylinder. 12: B volume of hot cylinder. 17: Warm piston diaphragm. 18: Heating medium. 19: Piston rod. 20: Cold cylinder. 21: A Volume of cold cylinder. 22: B Volume of cold cylinder. 27: Cold piston diaphragm. 28: Coolant medium. 30: Working cylinder. 31: A volume of working cylinder. 32: B volume of working cylinder. 37: Working piston diaphragm. 41: Regenerator mass of A volume. 42: Regenerator mass of B volume. 48: Heat accumulator. 50: Thermal insulation. 60: Generator. 63: Magnetic circuit. 64: Electrical winding. 70: Channel connecting warm and working cylinders.

Design of the flat double-acting Stirling engine solves the drive of a displacer with the help of the fact that areas of the hot and cold pistons of the displacer are different.[citation needed]

The drive does so without any mechanical transmission.[citation needed] Using diaphragms eliminates friction and need for lubricants.[citation needed]

When the displacer is in motion, the generator holds the working piston in the limit position, which brings the engine working cycle close to an ideal Stirling cycle.[citation needed] The ratio of the area of the heat exchangers to the volume of the machine increases by the implementation of a flat design.[citation needed]

Flat design of the working cylinder approximates thermal process of the expansion and compression closer to the isothermal one.[citation needed]

The disadvantage is a large area of the thermal insulation between the hot and cold space.[64]

Thermoacoustic cycle edit

Thermoacoustic devices are very different from Stirling devices, although the individual path travelled by each working gas molecule does follow a real Stirling cycle. These devices include the thermoacoustic engine and thermoacoustic refrigerator. High-amplitude acoustic standing waves cause compression and expansion analogous to a Stirling power piston, while out-of-phase acoustic travelling waves cause displacement along a temperature gradient, analogous to a Stirling displacer piston. Thus a thermoacoustic device typically does not have a displacer, as found in a beta or gamma Stirling.[citation needed]

Other developments edit

NASA has considered nuclear-decay heated Stirling Engines for extended missions to the outer solar system.[65] In 2018, NASA and the United States Department of Energy announced that they had successfully tested a new type of nuclear reactor called KRUSTY, which stands for "Kilopower Reactor Using Stirling TechnologY", and which is designed to be able to power deep space vehicles and probes as well as exoplanetary encampments.[66]

At the 2012 Cable-Tec Expo put on by the Society of Cable Telecommunications Engineers, Dean Kamen took the stage with Time Warner Cable Chief Technology Officer Mike LaJoie to announce a new initiative between his company Deka Research and the SCTE. Kamen refers to it as a Stirling engine.[67][68]

Operational considerations edit

Video showing the compressor and displacer of a very small Stirling Engine in action

Size and temperature edit

Very low-power engines have been built that run on a temperature difference of as little as 0.5 K.[69] A displacer-type Stirling engine has one piston and one displacer. A temperature difference is required between the top and bottom of the large cylinder to run the engine. In the case of the low-temperature-difference (LTD) Stirling engine, the temperature difference between one's hand and the surrounding air can be enough to run the engine.[70] The power piston in the displacer-type Stirling engine is tightly sealed and is controlled to move up and down as the gas inside expands. The displacer, on the other hand, is very loosely fitted so that air can move freely between the hot and cold sections of the engine as the piston moves up and down. The displacer moves up and down to cause most of the gas in the displacer cylinder to be either heated, or cooled.[citation needed]

Stirling engines, especially those that run on small temperature differentials, are quite large for the amount of power that they produce (i.e., they have low specific power). This is primarily due to the heat transfer coefficient of gaseous convection, which limits the heat flux that can be attained in a typical cold heat exchanger to about 500 W/(m2·K), and in a hot heat exchanger to about 500–5000 W/(m2·K).[71] Compared with internal combustion engines, this makes it more challenging for the engine designer to transfer heat into and out of the working gas. Because of the thermal efficiency the required heat transfer grows with lower temperature difference, and the heat exchanger surface (and cost) for 1 kW output grows with (1/ΔT)2. Therefore, the specific cost of very low temperature difference engines is very high. Increasing the temperature differential and/or pressure allows Stirling engines to produce more power, assuming the heat exchangers are designed for the increased heat load, and can deliver the convected heat flux necessary.

A Stirling engine cannot start instantly; it literally needs to "warm up". This is true of all external combustion engines, but the warm up time may be longer for Stirlings than for others of this type such as steam engines. Stirling engines are best used as constant speed engines.

Power output of a Stirling tends to be constant and to adjust it can sometimes require careful design and additional mechanisms. Typically, changes in output are achieved by varying the displacement of the engine (often through use of a swashplate crankshaft arrangement), or by changing the quantity of working fluid, or by altering the piston/displacer phase angle, or in some cases simply by altering the engine load. This property is less of a drawback in hybrid electric propulsion or "base load" utility generation where constant power output is actually desirable.

Gas choice edit

Video of a bench top stirling engine demonstrating the speed and power.

The gas used should have a low heat capacity, so that a given amount of transferred heat leads to a large increase in pressure. Considering this issue, helium would be the best gas because of its very low heat capacity. Air is a viable working fluid,[72] but the oxygen in a highly pressurized air engine can cause fatal accidents caused by lubricating oil explosions.[73] Following one such accident Philips pioneered the use of other gases to avoid such risk of explosions.

  • Hydrogen's low viscosity and high thermal conductivity make it the most powerful working gas, primarily because the engine can run faster than with other gases. However, because of hydrogen absorption, and given the high diffusion rate associated with this low molecular weight gas, particularly at high temperatures, H2 leaks through the solid metal of the heater. Diffusion through carbon steel is too high to be practical, but may be acceptably low for metals such as aluminum, or even stainless steel. Certain ceramics also greatly reduce diffusion. Hermetic pressure vessel seals are necessary to maintain pressure inside the engine without replacement of lost gas. For high-temperature-differential (HTD) engines, auxiliary systems may be required to maintain high-pressure working fluid. These systems can be a gas storage bottle or a gas generator. Hydrogen can be generated by electrolysis of water, the action of steam on red hot carbon-based fuel, by gasification of hydrocarbon fuel, or by the reaction of acid on metal. Hydrogen can also cause the embrittlement of metals. Hydrogen is a flammable gas, which is a safety concern if released from the engine.
  • Most technically advanced Stirling engines, like those developed for United States government labs, use helium as the working gas, because it functions close to the efficiency and power density of hydrogen with fewer of the material containment issues. Helium is inert, and hence not flammable. Helium is relatively expensive, and must be supplied as bottled gas. One test showed hydrogen to be 5% (absolute) more efficient than helium (24% relatively) in the GPU-3 Stirling engine.[74] The researcher Allan Organ demonstrated that a well-designed air engine is theoretically just as efficient as a helium or hydrogen engine, but helium and hydrogen engines are several times more powerful per unit volume.
  • Some engines use air or nitrogen as the working fluid. These gases have much lower power density (which increases engine costs), but they are more convenient to use and they minimize the problems of gas containment and supply (which decreases costs). The use of compressed air in contact with flammable materials or substances such as lubricating oil introduces an explosion hazard, because compressed air contains a high partial pressure of oxygen. However, oxygen can be removed from air through an oxidation reaction or bottled nitrogen can be used, which is nearly inert and very safe.
  • Other possible lighter-than-air gases include methane and ammonia.

Pressurization edit

In most high-power Stirling engines, both the minimum pressure and mean pressure of the working fluid are above atmospheric pressure. This initial engine pressurization can be realized by a pump, or by filling the engine from a compressed gas tank, or even just by sealing the engine when the mean temperature is lower than the mean operating temperature. All of these methods increase the mass of working fluid in the thermodynamic cycle. All of the heat exchangers must be sized appropriately to supply the necessary heat transfer rates. If the heat exchangers are well designed and can supply the heat flux needed for convective heat transfer, then the engine, in a first approximation, produces power in proportion to the mean pressure, as predicted by the West number and Beale number. In practice, the maximum pressure is also limited to the safe pressure of the pressure vessel. Like most aspects of Stirling engine design, optimization is multivariate, and often has conflicting requirements.[71] A difficulty of pressurization is that while it improves the power, the heat required increases proportionately to the increased power. This heat transfer is made increasingly difficult with pressurization since increased pressure also demands increased thicknesses of the walls of the engine, which, in turn, increase the resistance to heat transfer.[citation needed]

Lubricants and friction edit

 
A modern Stirling engine and generator set with 55 kW electrical output, for combined heat and power applications.

At high temperatures and pressures, the oxygen in air-pressurized crankcases, or in the working gas of hot air engines, can combine with the engine's lubricating oil and explode. At least one person has died in such an explosion.[73] Lubricants can also clog heat exchangers, especially the regenerator. For these reasons, designers prefer non-lubricated, low-coefficient of friction materials (such as rulon or graphite), with low normal forces on the moving parts, especially for sliding seals. Some designs avoid sliding surfaces altogether by using diaphragms for sealed pistons. These are some of the factors that allow Stirling engines to have lower maintenance requirements and longer life than internal-combustion engines.[citation needed]

Efficiency edit

Theoretical thermal efficiency equals that of the ideal Carnot cycle, i.e. the highest efficiency attainable by any heat engine. However, though it is useful for illustrating general principles, practical Stirling engines deviate substantially from the ideal.[75] It has been argued that its indiscriminate use in many standard books on engineering thermodynamics has done a disservice to the study of Stirling engines in general.[76][77]

Stirling engines cannot achieve total efficiencies typical of an internal combustion engine, the main constraint being thermal efficiency. During internal combustion, temperatures achieve around 1500 °C–1600 °C for a short period of time, resulting in greater mean heat supply temperature of the thermodynamic cycle than any Stirling engine could achieve. It is not possible to supply heat at temperatures that high by conduction, as it is done in Stirling engines because no material could conduct heat from combustion in that high temperature without huge heat losses and problems related to heat deformation of materials.[citation needed]

Stirling engines are capable of quiet operation and can use almost any heat source. The heat energy source is generated external to the Stirling engine rather than by internal combustion as with the Otto cycle or Diesel cycle engines. This type of engine is currently generating interest as the core component of micro combined heat and power (CHP) units, in which it is more efficient and safer than a comparable steam engine.[78][79] However, it has a low power-to-weight ratio,[80] rendering it more suitable for use in static installations where space and weight are not at a premium.[citation needed]

Other real-world issues reduce the efficiency of actual engines, due to the limits of convective heat transfer and viscous flow (friction). There are also practical, mechanical considerations: for instance, a simple kinematic linkage may be favoured over a more complex mechanism needed to replicate the idealized cycle, and limitations imposed by available materials such as non-ideal properties of the working gas, thermal conductivity, tensile strength, creep, rupture strength, and melting point. A question that often arises is whether the ideal cycle with isothermal expansion and compression is in fact the correct ideal cycle to apply to the Stirling engine. Professor C. J. Rallis has pointed out that it is very difficult to imagine any condition where the expansion and compression spaces may approach isothermal behavior and it is far more realistic to imagine these spaces as adiabatic.[81] An ideal analysis where the expansion and compression spaces are taken to be adiabatic with isothermal heat exchangers and perfect regeneration was analyzed by Rallis and presented as a better ideal yardstick for Stirling machinery. He called this cycle the 'pseudo-Stirling cycle' or 'ideal adiabatic Stirling cycle'. An important consequence of this ideal cycle is that it does not predict Carnot efficiency. A further conclusion of this ideal cycle is that maximum efficiencies are found at lower compression ratios, a characteristic observed in real machines. In an independent work, T. Finkelstein also assumed adiabatic expansion and compression spaces in his analysis of Stirling machinery[82]

The ideal Stirling cycle is unattainable in the real world, as with any heat engine. The efficiency of Stirling machines is also linked to the environmental temperature: higher efficiency is obtained when the weather is cooler, thus making this type of engine less attractive in places with warmer climates. As with other external combustion engines, Stirling engines can use heat sources other than the combustion of fuels. For example, various designs for solar-powered Stirling engines have been developed.

Comparison with internal combustion engines edit

In contrast to internal combustion engines, Stirling engines have the potential to use renewable heat sources more easily, and to be quieter and more reliable with lower maintenance. They are preferred for applications that value these unique advantages, particularly if the cost per unit energy generated is more important than the capital cost per unit power. On this basis, Stirling engines are cost-competitive up to about 100 kW.[83]

Compared to an internal combustion engine of the same power rating, Stirling engines currently have a higher capital cost and are usually larger and heavier. However, they are more efficient than most internal combustion engines.[84] Their lower maintenance requirements make the overall energy cost comparable. The thermal efficiency is also comparable (for small engines), ranging from 15% to 30%.[83] For applications such as micro-CHP, a Stirling engine is often preferable to an internal combustion engine. Other applications include water pumping, astronautics, and electrical generation from plentiful energy sources that are incompatible with the internal combustion engine, such as solar energy, and biomass such as agricultural waste and other waste such as domestic refuse. However, Stirling engines are generally not price-competitive as an automobile engine, because of high cost per unit power, & low power density.[citation needed]

Basic analysis is based on the closed-form Schmidt analysis.[85][86]

Advantages of Stirling engines compared to internal combustion engines include:

  • Stirling engines can run directly on any available heat source, not just one produced by combustion, so they can run on heat from solar, geothermal, biological, nuclear sources or waste heat from industrial processes.
  • A continuous combustion process can be used to supply heat, so those emissions associated with the intermittent combustion processes of a reciprocating internal combustion engine can be reduced.
  • Some types of Stirling engines have the bearings and seals on the cool side of the engine, where they require less lubricant and last longer than equivalents on other reciprocating engine types.
  • The engine mechanisms are in some ways simpler than other reciprocating engine types. No valves are needed, and the burner system can be relatively simple. Crude Stirling engines can be made using common household materials.[87]
  • A Stirling engine uses a single-phase working fluid that maintains an internal pressure close to the design pressure, and thus for a properly designed system the risk of explosion is low. In comparison, a steam engine uses a two-phase gas/liquid working fluid, so a faulty overpressure relief valve can cause an explosion.
  • In some cases, low operating pressure allows the use of lightweight cylinders.
  • They can be built to run quietly and without an air supply, for air-independent propulsion use in submarines.
  • They start easily (albeit slowly, after warmup) and run more efficiently in cold weather, in contrast to the internal combustion, which starts quickly in warm weather, but not in cold weather.
  • A Stirling engine used for pumping water can be configured so that the water cools the compression space. This increases efficiency when pumping cold water.
  • They are extremely flexible. They can be used as CHP (combined heat and power) in the winter and as coolers in summer.
  • Waste heat is easily harvested (compared to waste heat from an internal combustion engine), making Stirling engines useful for dual-output heat and power systems.
  • In 1986 NASA built a Stirling automotive engine and installed it in a Chevrolet Celebrity. Fuel economy was improved 45% and emissions were greatly reduced. Acceleration (power response) was equivalent to the standard internal combustion engine. This engine, designated the Mod II, also nullifies arguments that Stirling engines are heavy, expensive, unreliable, and demonstrate poor performance.[88] A catalytic converter, muffler and frequent oil changes are not required.[88]

Disadvantages of Stirling engines compared to internal combustion engines include:

  • Stirling engine designs require heat exchangers for heat input and for heat output, and these must contain the pressure of the working fluid, where the pressure is proportional to the engine power output. In addition, the expansion-side heat exchanger is often at very high temperature, so the materials must resist the corrosive effects of the heat source, and have low creep. Typically these material requirements substantially increase the cost of the engine. The materials and assembly costs for a high-temperature heat exchanger typically accounts for 40% of the total engine cost.[73]
  • All thermodynamic cycles require large temperature differentials for efficient operation. In an external combustion engine, the heater temperature always equals or exceeds the expansion temperature. This means that the metallurgical requirements for the heater material are very demanding. This is similar to a Gas turbine, but is in contrast to an Otto engine or Diesel engine, where the expansion temperature can far exceed the metallurgical limit of the engine materials, because the input heat source is not conducted through the engine, so engine materials operate closer to the average temperature of the working gas. The Stirling cycle is not actually achievable; the real cycle in Stirling machines is less efficient than the theoretical Stirling cycle. The efficiency of the Stirling cycle is lower where the ambient temperatures are mild, while it would give its best results in a cool environment, such as northern countries' winters.
  • Dissipation of waste heat is especially complicated because the coolant temperature is kept as low as possible to maximize thermal efficiency. This increases the size of the radiators, which can make packaging difficult. Along with materials cost, this has been one of the factors limiting the adoption of Stirling engines as automotive prime movers. For other applications such as ship propulsion and stationary microgeneration systems using combined heat and power (CHP) high power density is not required.[40]

Applications edit

 
Dish Stirling from SES

Applications of the Stirling engine range from heating and cooling to underwater power systems. A Stirling engine can function in reverse as a heat pump for heating or cooling. Other uses include combined heat and power, solar power generation, Stirling cryocoolers, heat pump, marine engines, low power model aircraft engines,[89] and low temperature difference engines.

See also edit

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General and cited references edit

  • E.H. Cooke-Yarborough; E. Franklin; J. Geisow; R. Howlett; C.D. West (1974). "Harwell Thermo-Mechanical Generator". Proceedings of the 9th IECEC. San Francisco: American Society of Mechanical Engineers. pp. 1132–1136. Bibcode:1974iece.conf.1132C.
  • E.H. Cooke-Yarborough (1970). "Heat Engines", US patent 3548589. Granted to Atomic Energy Authority UK, 22 December 1970.
  • E.H. Cooke-Yarborough (1967). "A Proposal for a Heat-Powered Nonrotating Electrical Alternator", Harwell Memorandum AERE-M881.
  • T. Finkelstein; A.J. Organ (2001). Air Engines. Professional Engineering Publishing. ISBN 1-86058-338-5.
  • C.M. Hargreaves (1991). The Philips Stirling Engine. Elsevier Science. ISBN 0-444-88463-7.
  • A.J. Organ (1992). Thermodynamics and Gas Dynamics of the Stirling Cycle Machine. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-41363-X.
  • R. Sier (1995). Reverend Robert Stirling D.D: A Biography of the Inventor of the Heat Economiser and Stirling Cycle Engine. L.A Mair. ISBN 0-9526417-0-4.

Further reading edit

  • S. Backhaus; G. Swift (2003). . Los Alamos National Laboratory. Archived from the original on 1 August 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  • BBC News (31 October 2003). "Power from the people". Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  • W.T. Beale (1971). "Stirling Cycle Type Thermal Device", US patent 3552120. Granted to Research Corp, 5 January 1971.
  • Carbon Trust (2007). . Archived from the original on 28 March 2014. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  • R.C. Belaire (1977). "Device for decreasing the start-up time for stirling engines", US patent 4057962. Granted to Ford Motor Company, 15 November 1977.
  • J. Harrison (2008). "What is micro generation?". Claverton Energy Research Group. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  • J. Hasci (2008). . Create the Future Design Contest. NASA & SolidWorks. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  • PASCO Scientific (1995). "Instruction Manual and Experiment Guide for the PASCO scientific Model SE-8575" (PDF). Retrieved 18 January 2009 – via Department of Physics - UC Santa Barbara.
  • Y. Timoumi; I. Tlili; S.B. Nasrallah (2008). "Performance Optimization of Stirling Engines". Renewable Energy. 33 (9): 2134–2144. doi:10.1016/j.renene.2007.12.012.
  • C.D. West (1970). "Hydraulic Heat Engines", Harwell Momorandum AERE-R6522.
  • S.K. Wickham (2008). . Union Leader. Archived from the original on 22 May 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  • Precer Group. "Solid Biofuel-Powered Vehicle Technology" (PDF). Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  • K. Hirata. "Palm Top Stirling Engine". Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  • D. Liao. "The Working Principles". Retrieved 18 January 2009.
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  • P.H. Ceperley (1979). "A pistonless Stirling engine—The traveling wave heat engine". Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 66 (5): 1508–1513. Bibcode:1979ASAJ...66.1508C. doi:10.1121/1.383505.
  • P. Fette. . Archived from the original on 8 March 2001. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
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External links edit

  • How Stirling Engines Work (YouTube video)
  • How Beta-type Stirling Engines Work (YouTube video)
  • NASA Stirling Engine Based Nuclear Power Plant For Lunar Use on YouTube
  • Stirling Cycle Machine Analysis by Israel Urieli
  • How to build your Stirling engine (2017). Stirling Engines: Design and Fabrication
  • Simple Performance Prediction Method for Stirling Engine
  • Inquiry into the Hot Air Engines of the 19th Century

stirling, engine, heat, engine, that, operated, cyclic, compression, expansion, other, working, fluid, between, different, temperatures, resulting, conversion, heat, energy, mechanical, work, model, showing, simplicity, unlike, steam, engine, internal, combust. A Stirling engine is a heat engine that is operated by the cyclic compression and expansion of air or other gas the working fluid between different temperatures resulting in a net conversion of heat energy to mechanical work 1 2 A model of a Stirling engine showing its simplicity Unlike the steam engine or internal combustion engine it has no valves or timing train The heat source not shown would be placed under the brass cylinder More specifically the Stirling engine is a closed cycle regenerative heat engine with a permanent gaseous working fluid Closed cycle in this context means a thermodynamic system in which the working fluid is permanently contained within the system Regenerative describes the use of a specific type of internal heat exchanger and thermal store known as the regenerator Strictly speaking the inclusion of the regenerator is what differentiates a Stirling engine from other closed cycle hot air engines 3 In the Stirling engine a gas is heated and expanded by energy supplied from outside the engine s interior space cylinder It is then shunted to a different location within the engine where it is cooled and compressed A piston or pistons move the gas to the correct places within the engine at the correct time in the cycle and extracts mechanical power from it The gas oscillates between these heating and cooling spaces changing temperature and pressure as it goes A unique feature is the regenerator which acts as a temporary heat store by retaining heat within the machine rather than dumping it into the heat sink thereby increasing its efficiency The heat is supplied from the outside so the hot area of the engine can be warmed with any external heat source Similarly the cooler part of the engine can be maintained by an external heat sink such as running water or air flow The gas is permanently retained in the engine allowing a gas with the most suitable properties to be used such as helium or hydrogen There are no intake and no exhaust gas flows so the machine is practically silent The machine is reversible so that if the shaft is turned by an external power source a temperature difference will develop across the machine in this way it acts as a heat pump The Stirling engine was invented by Scotsman Robert Stirling 4 in 1816 as an industrial prime mover to rival the steam engine and its practical use was largely confined to low power domestic applications for over a century 5 Contemporary investment in renewable energy especially solar energy has given rise to its application within concentrated solar power and as a heat pump Contents 1 History 1 1 Early hot air engines 1 2 Invention and early development 1 3 Later 19th century 1 4 20th century revival 1 5 21st century developments 2 Name and classification 3 Theory 4 Components 4 1 Heat source 4 2 Heat exchangers 4 3 Regenerator 4 4 Heat sink 4 5 Displacer 5 Configurations 5 1 Alpha 5 2 Beta 6 Other types 6 1 Free piston engines 6 2 Flat engines 6 3 Thermoacoustic cycle 6 4 Other developments 7 Operational considerations 7 1 Size and temperature 7 2 Gas choice 7 3 Pressurization 7 4 Lubricants and friction 8 Efficiency 9 Comparison with internal combustion engines 10 Applications 11 See also 12 Citations 13 General and cited references 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory editThis article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards as section You can help The talk page may contain suggestions June 2021 nbsp Illustration from Robert Stirling s 1816 patent application of the air engine design that later came to be known as the Stirling EngineEarly hot air engines edit Robert Stirling is considered one of the fathers of hot air engines notwithstanding some earlier predecessors notably Guillaume Amontons 6 who succeeded in building in 1699 the first working hot air engine 7 Amontons was later followed by Sir George Cayley 8 This engine type was of those in which the fire is enclosed and fed by air pumped in beneath the grate in sufficient quantity to maintain combustion while by far the largest portion of the air enters above the fire to be heated and expanded the whole together with the products of combustion then acts on the piston and passes through the working cylinder and the operation being one of simple mixture only no heating surface of metal is required the air to be heated being brought into immediate contact with the fire citation needed Stirling came up with a first air engine in 1816 9 The principle of the Stirling Air Engine differs from that of Sir George Cayley 1807 in which the air is forced through the furnace and exhausted whereas in Stirling s engine the air works in a closed circuit The inventor devoted most of his attention to that citation needed A 2 horsepower 1 5 kW engine built in 1818 for pumping water at an Ayrshire quarry continued to work for some time until a careless attendant allowed the heater to become overheated This experiment proved to the inventor that owing to the low working pressure obtainable the engine could only be adapted to low power for which there was at that time no demand citation needed The Stirling 1816 patent 10 was also about an economiser which is the predecessor of the regenerator In this patent 4081 he describes the economiser technology and several applications where such technology can be used Out of them came a new arrangement for a hot air engine citation needed With his brother James Stirling patented a second hot air engine in 1827 11 They inverted the design so that the hot ends of the displacers were underneath the machinery and they added a compressed air pump so the air within could be increased in pressure to around 20 standard atmospheres 2 000 kPa citation needed The Stirling brothers were followed shortly after 1828 by Parkinson amp Crossley 12 and Arnott 13 in 1829 citation needed These precursors including Ericsson 14 have brought to the world the hot air engine technology and its enormous advantages over the steam engine citation needed Each came with his own specific technology and although the Stirling engine and the Parkinson amp Crossley engines were quite similar Robert Stirling distinguished himself by inventing the regenerator citation needed Parkinson and Crossley introduced the principle of using air of greater density than that of the atmosphere and so obtained an engine of greater power in the same compass James Stirling followed this same idea when he built the famous Dundee engine 15 The Stirling patent of 1827 was the base of the Stirling third patent of 1840 16 The changes from the 1827 patent were minor but essential and this third patent led to the Dundee engine 17 James Stirling presented his engine to the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1845 18 the first engine of this kind which after various modifications was efficiently constructed and heated had a cylinder of 30 centimetres 12 inches in diameter with a length of stroke of 60 centimetres 2 ft and made 40 strokes or revolutions in a minute 40 rpm This engine moved all the machinery at the Dundee Foundry Company s works for eight or ten months and was previously found capable of raising 320 000 kg 700 000 lbs 60 cm 2 ft in a minute a power of approximately 16 kilowatts 21 horsepower citation needed Finding this power insufficient for their works the Dundee Foundry Company erected the second engine with a cylinder of 40 centimetres 16 inches in diameter a stroke of 1 2 metres 4 feet and making 28 strokes in a minute When this engine had been in continuous operation for over two years it had not only performed the work of the foundry in the most satisfactory manner but had been tested by a friction brake on a third mover to the extent of lifting nearly 687 tonnes 1 500 000 pounds approximately 34 kilowatts 45 horsepower citation needed Invention and early development edit The Stirling engine or Stirling s air engine as it was known at the time was invented and patented in 1816 19 It followed earlier attempts at making an air engine but was probably the first put to practical use when in 1818 an engine built by Stirling was employed pumping water in a quarry 20 The main subject of Stirling s original patent was a heat exchanger which he called an economiser for its enhancement of fuel economy in a variety of applications The patent also described in detail the employment of one form of the economiser in his unique closed cycle air engine design 21 in which application it is now generally known as a regenerator Subsequent development by Robert Stirling and his brother James an engineer resulted in patents for various improved configurations of the original engine including pressurization which by 1843 had sufficiently increased power output to drive all the machinery at a Dundee iron foundry 22 A paper presented by James Stirling in June 1845 to the Institution of Civil Engineers stated that his aims were not only to save fuel but also to create a safer alternative to the steam engines of the time 23 whose boilers frequently exploded causing many injuries and fatalities 24 25 This has however been disputed 26 The need for Stirling engines to run at very high temperatures to maximize power and efficiency exposed limitations in the materials of the day and the few engines that were built in those early years suffered unacceptably frequent failures albeit with far less disastrous consequences than boiler explosions 27 For example the Dundee foundry engine was replaced by a steam engine after three hot cylinder failures in four years 28 Later 19th century edit nbsp A typical late nineteenth early twentieth century water pumping engine by the Rider Ericsson Engine CompanySubsequent to the replacement of the Dundee foundry engine there is no record of the Stirling brothers having any further involvement with air engine development and the Stirling engine never again competed with steam as an industrial scale power source Steam boilers were becoming safer e g the Hartford Steam Boiler 29 and steam engines more efficient thus presenting less of a target for rival prime movers However beginning about 1860 smaller engines of the Stirling hot air type were produced in substantial numbers for applications in which reliable sources of low to medium power were required such as pumping air for church organs or raising water 30 These smaller engines generally operated at lower temperatures so as not to tax available materials and so were relatively inefficient Their selling point was that unlike steam engines they could be operated safely by anybody capable of managing a fire The 1906 Rider Ericsson Engine Co catalog claimed that any gardener or ordinary domestic can operate these engines and no licensed or experienced engineer is required Several types remained in production beyond the end of the century but apart from a few minor mechanical improvements the design of the Stirling engine in general stagnated during this period 31 20th century revival edit nbsp Philips MP1002CA Stirling generator of 1951During the early part of the 20th century the role of the Stirling engine as a domestic motor 32 was gradually taken over by electric motors and small internal combustion engines By the late 1930s it was largely forgotten only produced for toys and a few small ventilating fans 33 Around that time Philips was seeking to expand sales of its radios into parts of the world where grid electricity and batteries were not consistently available Philips management decided that offering a low power portable generator would facilitate such sales and asked a group of engineers at the company s research lab in Eindhoven to evaluate alternative ways of achieving this aim After a systematic comparison of various prime movers the team decided to go forward with the Stirling engine citing its quiet operation both audibly and in terms of radio interference and ability to run on a variety of heat sources common lamp oil cheap and available everywhere was favored 34 They were also aware that unlike steam and internal combustion engines virtually no serious development work had been carried out on the Stirling engine for many years and asserted that modern materials and know how should enable great improvements 35 By 1951 the 180 200 W generator set designated MP1002CA known as the Bungalow set was ready for production and an initial batch of 250 was planned but soon it became clear that they could not be made at a competitive price Additionally the advent of transistor radios and their much lower power requirements meant that the original reason for the set was disappearing Approximately 150 of these sets were eventually produced 36 Some found their way into university and college engineering departments around the world giving generations of students a valuable introduction to the Stirling engine a letter dated March 1961 from Research and Control Instruments Ltd London WC1 to North Devon Technical College offering remaining stocks to institutions such as yourselves at a special price of 75 net citation needed In parallel with the Bungalow set Philips developed experimental Stirling engines for a wide variety of applications and continued to work in the field until the late 1970s but only achieved commercial success with the reversed Stirling engine cryocooler They filed a large number of patents and amassed a wealth of information which they licensed to other companies and which formed the basis of much of the development work in the modern era 37 In 1996 the Swedish navy commissioned three Gotland class submarines On the surface these boats are propelled by marine diesel engines however when submerged they use a Stirling driven generator developed by Swedish shipbuilder Kockums to recharge batteries and provide electrical power for propulsion 38 A supply of liquid oxygen is carried to support burning of diesel fuel to power the engine Stirling engines are also fitted to Swedish Sodermanland class submarines the Archer class submarines in service in Singapore and the Japanese Sōryu class submarines with the engines license built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries In a submarine application the Stirling engine offers the advantage of being exceptionally quiet when running citation needed 21st century developments edit Further information Solar powered Stirling engine By the turn of the 21st century Stirling engines were used in the dish version of Concentrated Solar Power systems A mirrored dish similar to a very large satellite dish directs and concentrates sunlight onto a thermal receiver which absorbs and collects the heat and using a fluid transfers it into the Stirling engine The resulting mechanical power is then used to run a generator or alternator to produce electricity 39 The core component of micro combined heat and power CHP units can be formed by a Stirling cycle engine as they are more efficient and safer than a comparable steam engine By 2003 CHP units were being commercially installed in domestic applications 40 In 2013 an article was published about scaling laws of free piston Stirling engines based on six characteristic dimensionless groups 41 Name and classification edit nbsp Stirling engine runningRobert Stirling patented the first practical example of a closed cycle hot air engine in 1816 and it was suggested by Fleeming Jenkin as early as 1884 that all such engines should therefore generically be called Stirling engines This naming proposal found little favour and the various types on the market continued to be known by the name of their individual designers or manufacturers e g Rider s Robinson s or Heinrici s hot air engine In the 1940s the Philips company was seeking a suitable name for its own version of the air engine which by that time had been tested with working fluids other than air and decided upon Stirling engine in April 1945 42 However nearly thirty years later Graham Walker still had cause to bemoan the fact such terms as hot air engine remained interchangeable with Stirling engine which itself was applied widely and indiscriminately 43 a situation that continues 44 Like the steam engine the Stirling engine is traditionally classified as an external combustion engine as all heat transfers to and from the working fluid take place through a solid boundary heat exchanger thus isolating the combustion process and any contaminants it may produce from the working parts of the engine This contrasts with an internal combustion engine where heat input is by combustion of a fuel within the body of the working fluid Most of the many possible implementations of the Stirling engine fall into the category of reciprocating piston engine citation needed Theory editMain article Stirling cycle nbsp A pressure volume graph of the idealized Stirling cycle The idealised Stirling cycle consists of four thermodynamic processes acting on the working fluid Isothermal expansion The expansion space and associated heat exchanger are maintained at a constant high temperature and the gas undergoes near isothermal expansion absorbing heat from the hot source Constant volume known as isovolumetric or isochoric heat removal The gas is passed through the regenerator where it cools transferring heat to the regenerator for use in the next cycle Isothermal compression The compression space and associated heat exchanger are maintained at a constant low temperature so the gas undergoes near isothermal compression rejecting heat to the cold sink Constant volume known as isovolumetric or isochoric heat addition The gas passes back through the regenerator where it recovers much of the heat transferred in process 2 heating up on its way to the expansion space The engine is designed so the working gas is generally compressed in the colder portion of the engine and expanded in the hotter portion resulting in a net conversion of heat into work 2 An internal regenerative heat exchanger increases the Stirling engine s thermal efficiency compared to simpler hot air engines lacking this feature The Stirling engine uses the temperature difference between its hot end and cold end to establish a cycle of a fixed mass of gas heated and expanded and cooled and compressed thus converting thermal energy into mechanical energy The greater the temperature difference between the hot and cold sources the greater the thermal efficiency The maximum theoretical efficiency is equivalent to that of the Carnot cycle but the efficiency of real engines is less than this value because of friction and other losses citation needed Since the Stirling engine is a closed cycle it contains a fixed mass of gas called the working fluid most commonly air hydrogen or helium In normal operation the engine is sealed and no gas enters or leaves no valves are required unlike other types of piston engines The Stirling engine like most heat engines cycles through four main processes cooling compression heating and expansion This is accomplished by moving the gas back and forth between hot and cold heat exchangers often with a regenerator between the heater and cooler The hot heat exchanger is in thermal contact with an external heat source such as a fuel burner and the cold heat exchanger is in thermal contact with an external heat sink such as air fins A change in gas temperature causes a corresponding change in gas pressure while the motion of the piston makes the gas alternately expand and compress citation needed The gas follows the behaviour described by the gas laws that describe how a gas s pressure temperature and volume are related When the gas is heated the pressure rises because it is in a sealed chamber and this pressure then acts on the power piston to produce a power stroke When the gas is cooled the pressure drops and this drop means that the piston needs to do less work to compress the gas on the return stroke The difference in work between the strokes yields a net positive power output citation needed When one side of the piston is open to the atmosphere the operation is slightly different As the sealed volume of working gas comes in contact with the hot side it expands doing work on both the piston and on the atmosphere When the working gas contacts the cold side its pressure drops below atmospheric pressure and the atmosphere pushes on the piston and does work on the gas citation needed Components edit nbsp Cut away diagram of a rhombic drive beta configuration Stirling engine design 1 Hot cylinder wall 2 Cold cylinder wall 3 Coolant inlet and outlet pipes 4 Thermal insulation separating the two cylinder ends 5 Displacer piston 6 Power piston 7 Linkage crank and flywheels Not shown Heat source and heat sinks In this design the displacer piston is constructed without a purpose built regenerator As a consequence of closed cycle operation the heat driving a Stirling engine must be transmitted from a heat source to the working fluid by heat exchangers and finally to a heat sink A Stirling engine system has at least one heat source one heat sink and up to five heat exchangers Some types may combine or dispense with some of these citation needed Heat source edit nbsp Point focus parabolic mirror with Stirling engine at its centre and its solar tracker at Plataforma Solar de Almeria PSA in Spain The heat source may be provided by the combustion of a fuel and since the combustion products do not mix with the working fluid and hence do not come into contact with the internal parts of the engine a Stirling engine can run on fuels that would damage other engines types internals such as landfill gas which may contain siloxane that could deposit abrasive silicon dioxide in conventional engines 45 Other suitable heat sources include concentrated solar energy geothermal energy nuclear energy waste heat and bioenergy If solar power is used as a heat source regular solar mirrors and solar dishes may be utilised The use of Fresnel lenses and mirrors has also been advocated for example in planetary surface exploration 46 Solar powered Stirling engines are increasingly popular as they offer an environmentally sound option for producing power while some designs are economically attractive in development projects 47 Heat exchangers edit Designing Stirling engine heat exchangers is a balance between high heat transfer with low viscous pumping losses and low dead space unswept internal volume Engines that operate at high powers and pressures require that heat exchangers on the hot side be made of alloys that retain considerable strength at high temperatures and that don t corrode or creep citation needed In small low power engines the heat exchangers may simply consist of the walls of the respective hot and cold chambers but where larger powers are required a greater surface area is needed to transfer sufficient heat Typical implementations are internal and external fins or multiple small bore tubes for the hot side and a cooler using a liquid like water for the cool side citation needed Regenerator edit Main article Regenerative heat exchanger In a Stirling engine the regenerator is an internal heat exchanger and temporary heat store placed between the hot and cold spaces such that the working fluid passes through it first in one direction then the other taking heat from the fluid in one direction and returning it in the other It can be as simple as metal mesh or foam and benefits from high surface area high heat capacity low conductivity and low flow friction 48 Its function is to retain within the system that heat which would otherwise be exchanged with the environment at temperatures intermediate to the maximum and minimum cycle temperatures 49 thus enabling the thermal efficiency of the cycle though not of any practical engine 50 to approach the limiting Carnot efficiency citation needed The primary effect of regeneration in a Stirling engine is to increase the thermal efficiency by recycling internal heat which would otherwise pass through the engine irreversibly As a secondary effect increased thermal efficiency yields a higher power output from a given set of hot and cold end heat exchangers These usually limit the engine s heat throughput In practice this additional power may not be fully realized as the additional dead space unswept volume and pumping loss inherent in practical regenerators reduces the potential efficiency gains from regeneration citation needed The design challenge for a Stirling engine regenerator is to provide sufficient heat transfer capacity without introducing too much additional internal volume dead space or flow resistance These inherent design conflicts are one of many factors that limit the efficiency of practical Stirling engines A typical design is a stack of fine metal wire meshes with low porosity to reduce dead space and with the wire axes perpendicular to the gas flow to reduce conduction in that direction and to maximize convective heat transfer 51 The regenerator is the key component invented by Robert Stirling and its presence distinguishes a true Stirling engine from any other closed cycle hot air engine Many small toy Stirling engines particularly low temperature difference LTD types do not have a distinct regenerator component and might be considered hot air engines however a small amount of regeneration is provided by the surface of the displacer itself and the nearby cylinder wall or similarly the passage connecting the hot and cold cylinders of an alpha configuration engine citation needed Heat sink edit The larger the temperature difference between the hot and cold sections of a Stirling engine the greater the engine s efficiency The heat sink is typically the environment the engine operates in at ambient temperature In the case of medium to high power engines a radiator is required to transfer the heat from the engine to the ambient air Marine engines have the advantage of using cool ambient sea lake or river water which is typically cooler than ambient air In the case of combined heat and power systems the engine s cooling water is used directly or indirectly for heating purposes raising efficiency citation needed Alternatively heat may be supplied at ambient temperature and the heat sink maintained at a lower temperature by such means as cryogenic fluid see Liquid nitrogen economy or iced water citation needed Displacer edit The displacer is a special purpose piston used in Beta and Gamma type Stirling engines to move the working gas back and forth between the hot and cold heat exchangers Depending on the type of engine design the displacer may or may not be sealed to the cylinder i e it may be a loose fit within the cylinder allowing the working gas to pass around it as it moves to occupy the part of the cylinder beyond The Alpha type engine has a high stress on the hot side that s why so few inventors started to use a hybrid piston for that side The hybrid piston has a sealed part as a normal Alpha type engine but it has a connected displacer part with smaller diameter as the cylinder around that The compression ratio is a bit smaller than in the original Alpha type engines but the stress factor is pretty low on the sealed parts citation needed Configurations editThe three major types of Stirling engines are distinguished by the way they move the air between the hot and cold areas citation needed The alpha configuration has two power pistons one in a hot cylinder one in a cold cylinder and the gas is driven between the two by the pistons it is typically in a V formation with the pistons joined at the same point on a crankshaft The beta configuration has a single cylinder with a hot end and a cold end containing a power piston and a displacer that drives the gas between the hot and cold ends It is typically used with a rhombic drive to achieve the phase difference between the displacer and power pistons but they can be joined 90 degrees out of phase on a crankshaft The gamma configuration has two cylinders one containing a displacer with a hot and a cold end and one for the power piston they are joined to form a single space so the cylinders have equal pressure the pistons are typically in parallel and joined 90 degrees out of phase on a crankshaft Alpha edit nbsp Alpha type Stirling engine There are two cylinders The expansion cylinder red is maintained at a high temperature while the compression cylinder blue is cooled The passage between the two cylinders contains the regeneratorAn alpha Stirling contains two power pistons in separate cylinders one hot and one cold The hot cylinder is situated inside the high temperature heat exchanger and the cold cylinder is situated inside the low temperature heat exchanger This type of engine has a high power to volume ratio but has technical problems because of the usually high temperature of the hot piston and the durability of its seals 52 In practice this piston usually carries a large insulating head to move the seals away from the hot zone at the expense of some additional dead space The crank angle has a major effect on efficiency and the best angle frequently must be found experimentally An angle of 90 frequently locks citation needed A four step description of the process is as follows Most of the working gas is in the hot cylinder and has more contact with the hot cylinder s walls This results in overall heating of the gas Its pressure increases and the gas expands Because the hot cylinder is at its maximum volume and the cold cylinder is at mid stroke partial volume the volume of the system is increased by expansion into the cold cylinder The system is at its maximum volume and more gas has contact with the cold cylinder This cools the gas lowering its pressure Because of flywheel momentum or other piston pairs on the same shaft the hot cylinder begins an upstroke reducing the volume of the system Almost all the gas is now in the cold cylinder and cooling continues This continues to reduce the pressure of the gas and cause contraction Because the hot cylinder is at minimum volume and the cold cylinder is at its maximum volume the volume of the system is further reduced by compression of the cold cylinder inwards The system is at its minimum volume and the gas has greater contact with the hot cylinder The volume of the system increases by expansion of the hot cylinder Beta edit nbsp Beta type Stirling engine with only one cylinder hot at one end and cold at the other A loose fitting displacer shunts the air between the hot and cold ends of the cylinder A power piston at the open end of the cylinder drives the flywheelA beta Stirling has a single power piston arranged within the same cylinder on the same shaft as a displacer piston The displacer piston is a loose fit and does not extract any power from the expanding gas but only serves to shuttle the working gas between the hot and cold heat exchangers When the working gas is pushed to the hot end of the cylinder it expands and pushes the power piston When it is pushed to the cold end of the cylinder it contracts and the momentum of the machine usually enhanced by a flywheel pushes the power piston the other way to compress the gas Unlike the alpha type the beta type avoids the technical problems of hot moving seals as the power piston is not in contact with the hot gas 53 Power piston dark grey has compressed the gas the displacer piston light grey has moved so that most of the gas is adjacent to the hot heat exchanger The heated gas increases in pressure and pushes the power piston to the farthest limit of the power stroke The displacer piston now moves shunting the gas to the cold end of the cylinder The cooled gas is now compressed by the flywheel momentum This takes less energy since its pressure drops when it is cooled Other types edit nbsp Top view of two rotating displacers powering the horizontal piston Regenerators and radiator removed for clarityOther Stirling configurations continue to interest engineers and inventors citation needed The rotary Stirling engine seeks to convert power from the Stirling cycle directly into torque similar to the rotary combustion engine No practical engine has yet been built but a number of concepts models and patents have been produced such as the Quasiturbine engine 54 A hybrid between piston and rotary configuration is a double acting engine This design rotates the displacers on either side of the power piston In addition to giving great design variability in the heat transfer area this layout eliminates all but one external seal on the output shaft and one internal seal on the piston Also both sides can be highly pressurized as they balance against each other citation needed Another alternative is the Fluidyne engine or Fluidyne heat pump which uses hydraulic pistons to implement the Stirling cycle The work produced by a Fluidyne engine goes into pumping the liquid In its simplest form the engine contains a working gas a liquid and two non return valves citation needed The Ringbom engine concept published in 1907 has no rotary mechanism or linkage for the displacer This is instead driven by a small auxiliary piston usually a thick displacer rod with the movement limited by stops 55 56 The engineer Andy Ross invented a two cylinder Stirling engine positioned at 0 not 90 connected using a special yoke 57 promotion The Franchot engine is a double acting engine invented by Charles Louis Felix Franchot in the nineteenth century In a double acting engine the pressure of the working fluid acts on both sides of the piston One of the simplest forms of a double acting machine the Franchot engine consists of two pistons and two cylinders and acts like two separate alpha machines In the Franchot engine each piston acts in two gas phases which makes more efficient use of the mechanical components than a single acting alpha machine However a disadvantage of this machine is that one connecting rod must have a sliding seal at the hot side of the engine which is difficult when dealing with high pressures and temperatures 58 Free piston engines edit nbsp Various free piston Stirling configurations F free cylinder G Fluidyne H double acting Stirling typically 4 cylinders Free piston Stirling engines include those with liquid pistons and those with diaphragms as pistons In a free piston device energy may be added or removed by an electrical linear alternator pump or other coaxial device This avoids the need for a linkage and reduces the number of moving parts In some designs friction and wear are nearly eliminated by the use of non contact gas bearings or very precise suspension through planar springs citation needed Four basic steps in the cycle of a free piston Stirling engine are citation needed The power piston is pushed outwards by the expanding gas thus doing work Gravity plays no role in the cycle The gas volume in the engine increases and therefore the pressure reduces which causes a pressure difference across the displacer rod to force the displacer towards the hot end When the displacer moves the piston is almost stationary and therefore the gas volume is almost constant This step results in the constant volume cooling process which reduces the pressure of the gas The reduced pressure now arrests the outward motion of the piston and it begins to accelerate towards the hot end again and by its own inertia compresses the now cold gas which is mainly in the cold space As the pressure increases a point is reached where the pressure differential across the displacer rod becomes large enough to begin to push the displacer rod and therefore also the displacer towards the piston and thereby collapsing the cold space and transferring the cold compressed gas towards the hot side in an almost constant volume process As the gas arrives in the hot side the pressure increases and begins to move the piston outwards to initiate the expansion step as explained in 1 In the early 1960s William T Beale of Ohio University located in Athens Ohio invented a free piston version of the Stirling engine to overcome the difficulty of lubricating the crank mechanism 59 While the invention of the basic free piston Stirling engine is generally attributed to Beale independent inventions of similar types of engines were made by E H Cooke Yarborough and C West at the Harwell Laboratories of the UK AERE 60 G M Benson also made important early contributions and patented many novel free piston configurations 61 62 The first known mention of a Stirling cycle machine using freely moving components is a British patent disclosure in 1876 63 This machine was envisaged as a refrigerator i e the reversed Stirling cycle The first consumer product to utilize a free piston Stirling device was a portable refrigerator manufactured by Twinbird Corporation of Japan and offered in the US by Coleman in 2004 citation needed Flat engines edit nbsp Cutaway of the flat Stirling engine 10 Hot cylinder 11 A volume of hot cylinder 12 B volume of hot cylinder 17 Warm piston diaphragm 18 Heating medium 19 Piston rod 20 Cold cylinder 21 A Volume of cold cylinder 22 B Volume of cold cylinder 27 Cold piston diaphragm 28 Coolant medium 30 Working cylinder 31 A volume of working cylinder 32 B volume of working cylinder 37 Working piston diaphragm 41 Regenerator mass of A volume 42 Regenerator mass of B volume 48 Heat accumulator 50 Thermal insulation 60 Generator 63 Magnetic circuit 64 Electrical winding 70 Channel connecting warm and working cylinders Design of the flat double acting Stirling engine solves the drive of a displacer with the help of the fact that areas of the hot and cold pistons of the displacer are different citation needed The drive does so without any mechanical transmission citation needed Using diaphragms eliminates friction and need for lubricants citation needed When the displacer is in motion the generator holds the working piston in the limit position which brings the engine working cycle close to an ideal Stirling cycle citation needed The ratio of the area of the heat exchangers to the volume of the machine increases by the implementation of a flat design citation needed Flat design of the working cylinder approximates thermal process of the expansion and compression closer to the isothermal one citation needed The disadvantage is a large area of the thermal insulation between the hot and cold space 64 Thermoacoustic cycle edit Thermoacoustic devices are very different from Stirling devices although the individual path travelled by each working gas molecule does follow a real Stirling cycle These devices include the thermoacoustic engine and thermoacoustic refrigerator High amplitude acoustic standing waves cause compression and expansion analogous to a Stirling power piston while out of phase acoustic travelling waves cause displacement along a temperature gradient analogous to a Stirling displacer piston Thus a thermoacoustic device typically does not have a displacer as found in a beta or gamma Stirling citation needed Other developments edit NASA has considered nuclear decay heated Stirling Engines for extended missions to the outer solar system 65 In 2018 NASA and the United States Department of Energy announced that they had successfully tested a new type of nuclear reactor called KRUSTY which stands for Kilopower Reactor Using Stirling TechnologY and which is designed to be able to power deep space vehicles and probes as well as exoplanetary encampments 66 At the 2012 Cable Tec Expo put on by the Society of Cable Telecommunications Engineers Dean Kamen took the stage with Time Warner Cable Chief Technology Officer Mike LaJoie to announce a new initiative between his company Deka Research and the SCTE Kamen refers to it as a Stirling engine 67 68 Operational considerations edit source source source source source source Video showing the compressor and displacer of a very small Stirling Engine in actionSize and temperature edit Very low power engines have been built that run on a temperature difference of as little as 0 5 K 69 A displacer type Stirling engine has one piston and one displacer A temperature difference is required between the top and bottom of the large cylinder to run the engine In the case of the low temperature difference LTD Stirling engine the temperature difference between one s hand and the surrounding air can be enough to run the engine 70 The power piston in the displacer type Stirling engine is tightly sealed and is controlled to move up and down as the gas inside expands The displacer on the other hand is very loosely fitted so that air can move freely between the hot and cold sections of the engine as the piston moves up and down The displacer moves up and down to cause most of the gas in the displacer cylinder to be either heated or cooled citation needed Stirling engines especially those that run on small temperature differentials are quite large for the amount of power that they produce i e they have low specific power This is primarily due to the heat transfer coefficient of gaseous convection which limits the heat flux that can be attained in a typical cold heat exchanger to about 500 W m2 K and in a hot heat exchanger to about 500 5000 W m2 K 71 Compared with internal combustion engines this makes it more challenging for the engine designer to transfer heat into and out of the working gas Because of the thermal efficiency the required heat transfer grows with lower temperature difference and the heat exchanger surface and cost for 1 kW output grows with 1 DT 2 Therefore the specific cost of very low temperature difference engines is very high Increasing the temperature differential and or pressure allows Stirling engines to produce more power assuming the heat exchangers are designed for the increased heat load and can deliver the convected heat flux necessary A Stirling engine cannot start instantly it literally needs to warm up This is true of all external combustion engines but the warm up time may be longer for Stirlings than for others of this type such as steam engines Stirling engines are best used as constant speed engines Power output of a Stirling tends to be constant and to adjust it can sometimes require careful design and additional mechanisms Typically changes in output are achieved by varying the displacement of the engine often through use of a swashplate crankshaft arrangement or by changing the quantity of working fluid or by altering the piston displacer phase angle or in some cases simply by altering the engine load This property is less of a drawback in hybrid electric propulsion or base load utility generation where constant power output is actually desirable Gas choice edit source source source source source source source source source Video of a bench top stirling engine demonstrating the speed and power The gas used should have a low heat capacity so that a given amount of transferred heat leads to a large increase in pressure Considering this issue helium would be the best gas because of its very low heat capacity Air is a viable working fluid 72 but the oxygen in a highly pressurized air engine can cause fatal accidents caused by lubricating oil explosions 73 Following one such accident Philips pioneered the use of other gases to avoid such risk of explosions Hydrogen s low viscosity and high thermal conductivity make it the most powerful working gas primarily because the engine can run faster than with other gases However because of hydrogen absorption and given the high diffusion rate associated with this low molecular weight gas particularly at high temperatures H2 leaks through the solid metal of the heater Diffusion through carbon steel is too high to be practical but may be acceptably low for metals such as aluminum or even stainless steel Certain ceramics also greatly reduce diffusion Hermetic pressure vessel seals are necessary to maintain pressure inside the engine without replacement of lost gas For high temperature differential HTD engines auxiliary systems may be required to maintain high pressure working fluid These systems can be a gas storage bottle or a gas generator Hydrogen can be generated by electrolysis of water the action of steam on red hot carbon based fuel by gasification of hydrocarbon fuel or by the reaction of acid on metal Hydrogen can also cause the embrittlement of metals Hydrogen is a flammable gas which is a safety concern if released from the engine Most technically advanced Stirling engines like those developed for United States government labs use helium as the working gas because it functions close to the efficiency and power density of hydrogen with fewer of the material containment issues Helium is inert and hence not flammable Helium is relatively expensive and must be supplied as bottled gas One test showed hydrogen to be 5 absolute more efficient than helium 24 relatively in the GPU 3 Stirling engine 74 The researcher Allan Organ demonstrated that a well designed air engine is theoretically just as efficient as a helium or hydrogen engine but helium and hydrogen engines are several times more powerful per unit volume Some engines use air or nitrogen as the working fluid These gases have much lower power density which increases engine costs but they are more convenient to use and they minimize the problems of gas containment and supply which decreases costs The use of compressed air in contact with flammable materials or substances such as lubricating oil introduces an explosion hazard because compressed air contains a high partial pressure of oxygen However oxygen can be removed from air through an oxidation reaction or bottled nitrogen can be used which is nearly inert and very safe Other possible lighter than air gases include methane and ammonia Pressurization edit In most high power Stirling engines both the minimum pressure and mean pressure of the working fluid are above atmospheric pressure This initial engine pressurization can be realized by a pump or by filling the engine from a compressed gas tank or even just by sealing the engine when the mean temperature is lower than the mean operating temperature All of these methods increase the mass of working fluid in the thermodynamic cycle All of the heat exchangers must be sized appropriately to supply the necessary heat transfer rates If the heat exchangers are well designed and can supply the heat flux needed for convective heat transfer then the engine in a first approximation produces power in proportion to the mean pressure as predicted by the West number and Beale number In practice the maximum pressure is also limited to the safe pressure of the pressure vessel Like most aspects of Stirling engine design optimization is multivariate and often has conflicting requirements 71 A difficulty of pressurization is that while it improves the power the heat required increases proportionately to the increased power This heat transfer is made increasingly difficult with pressurization since increased pressure also demands increased thicknesses of the walls of the engine which in turn increase the resistance to heat transfer citation needed Lubricants and friction edit nbsp A modern Stirling engine and generator set with 55 kW electrical output for combined heat and power applications At high temperatures and pressures the oxygen in air pressurized crankcases or in the working gas of hot air engines can combine with the engine s lubricating oil and explode At least one person has died in such an explosion 73 Lubricants can also clog heat exchangers especially the regenerator For these reasons designers prefer non lubricated low coefficient of friction materials such as rulon or graphite with low normal forces on the moving parts especially for sliding seals Some designs avoid sliding surfaces altogether by using diaphragms for sealed pistons These are some of the factors that allow Stirling engines to have lower maintenance requirements and longer life than internal combustion engines citation needed Efficiency editThe neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Theoretical thermal efficiency equals that of the ideal Carnot cycle i e the highest efficiency attainable by any heat engine However though it is useful for illustrating general principles practical Stirling engines deviate substantially from the ideal 75 It has been argued that its indiscriminate use in many standard books on engineering thermodynamics has done a disservice to the study of Stirling engines in general 76 77 Stirling engines cannot achieve total efficiencies typical of an internal combustion engine the main constraint being thermal efficiency During internal combustion temperatures achieve around 1500 C 1600 C for a short period of time resulting in greater mean heat supply temperature of the thermodynamic cycle than any Stirling engine could achieve It is not possible to supply heat at temperatures that high by conduction as it is done in Stirling engines because no material could conduct heat from combustion in that high temperature without huge heat losses and problems related to heat deformation of materials citation needed Stirling engines are capable of quiet operation and can use almost any heat source The heat energy source is generated external to the Stirling engine rather than by internal combustion as with the Otto cycle or Diesel cycle engines This type of engine is currently generating interest as the core component of micro combined heat and power CHP units in which it is more efficient and safer than a comparable steam engine 78 79 However it has a low power to weight ratio 80 rendering it more suitable for use in static installations where space and weight are not at a premium citation needed Other real world issues reduce the efficiency of actual engines due to the limits of convective heat transfer and viscous flow friction There are also practical mechanical considerations for instance a simple kinematic linkage may be favoured over a more complex mechanism needed to replicate the idealized cycle and limitations imposed by available materials such as non ideal properties of the working gas thermal conductivity tensile strength creep rupture strength and melting point A question that often arises is whether the ideal cycle with isothermal expansion and compression is in fact the correct ideal cycle to apply to the Stirling engine Professor C J Rallis has pointed out that it is very difficult to imagine any condition where the expansion and compression spaces may approach isothermal behavior and it is far more realistic to imagine these spaces as adiabatic 81 An ideal analysis where the expansion and compression spaces are taken to be adiabatic with isothermal heat exchangers and perfect regeneration was analyzed by Rallis and presented as a better ideal yardstick for Stirling machinery He called this cycle the pseudo Stirling cycle or ideal adiabatic Stirling cycle An important consequence of this ideal cycle is that it does not predict Carnot efficiency A further conclusion of this ideal cycle is that maximum efficiencies are found at lower compression ratios a characteristic observed in real machines In an independent work T Finkelstein also assumed adiabatic expansion and compression spaces in his analysis of Stirling machinery 82 The ideal Stirling cycle is unattainable in the real world as with any heat engine The efficiency of Stirling machines is also linked to the environmental temperature higher efficiency is obtained when the weather is cooler thus making this type of engine less attractive in places with warmer climates As with other external combustion engines Stirling engines can use heat sources other than the combustion of fuels For example various designs for solar powered Stirling engines have been developed Comparison with internal combustion engines editThis article contains a pro and con list Please help rewriting it into consolidated sections based on topics May 2021 In contrast to internal combustion engines Stirling engines have the potential to use renewable heat sources more easily and to be quieter and more reliable with lower maintenance They are preferred for applications that value these unique advantages particularly if the cost per unit energy generated is more important than the capital cost per unit power On this basis Stirling engines are cost competitive up to about 100 kW 83 Compared to an internal combustion engine of the same power rating Stirling engines currently have a higher capital cost and are usually larger and heavier However they are more efficient than most internal combustion engines 84 Their lower maintenance requirements make the overall energy cost comparable The thermal efficiency is also comparable for small engines ranging from 15 to 30 83 For applications such as micro CHP a Stirling engine is often preferable to an internal combustion engine Other applications include water pumping astronautics and electrical generation from plentiful energy sources that are incompatible with the internal combustion engine such as solar energy and biomass such as agricultural waste and other waste such as domestic refuse However Stirling engines are generally not price competitive as an automobile engine because of high cost per unit power amp low power density citation needed Basic analysis is based on the closed form Schmidt analysis 85 86 Advantages of Stirling engines compared to internal combustion engines include Stirling engines can run directly on any available heat source not just one produced by combustion so they can run on heat from solar geothermal biological nuclear sources or waste heat from industrial processes A continuous combustion process can be used to supply heat so those emissions associated with the intermittent combustion processes of a reciprocating internal combustion engine can be reduced Some types of Stirling engines have the bearings and seals on the cool side of the engine where they require less lubricant and last longer than equivalents on other reciprocating engine types The engine mechanisms are in some ways simpler than other reciprocating engine types No valves are needed and the burner system can be relatively simple Crude Stirling engines can be made using common household materials 87 A Stirling engine uses a single phase working fluid that maintains an internal pressure close to the design pressure and thus for a properly designed system the risk of explosion is low In comparison a steam engine uses a two phase gas liquid working fluid so a faulty overpressure relief valve can cause an explosion In some cases low operating pressure allows the use of lightweight cylinders They can be built to run quietly and without an air supply for air independent propulsion use in submarines They start easily albeit slowly after warmup and run more efficiently in cold weather in contrast to the internal combustion which starts quickly in warm weather but not in cold weather A Stirling engine used for pumping water can be configured so that the water cools the compression space This increases efficiency when pumping cold water They are extremely flexible They can be used as CHP combined heat and power in the winter and as coolers in summer Waste heat is easily harvested compared to waste heat from an internal combustion engine making Stirling engines useful for dual output heat and power systems In 1986 NASA built a Stirling automotive engine and installed it in a Chevrolet Celebrity Fuel economy was improved 45 and emissions were greatly reduced Acceleration power response was equivalent to the standard internal combustion engine This engine designated the Mod II also nullifies arguments that Stirling engines are heavy expensive unreliable and demonstrate poor performance 88 A catalytic converter muffler and frequent oil changes are not required 88 Disadvantages of Stirling engines compared to internal combustion engines include Stirling engine designs require heat exchangers for heat input and for heat output and these must contain the pressure of the working fluid where the pressure is proportional to the engine power output In addition the expansion side heat exchanger is often at very high temperature so the materials must resist the corrosive effects of the heat source and have low creep Typically these material requirements substantially increase the cost of the engine The materials and assembly costs for a high temperature heat exchanger typically accounts for 40 of the total engine cost 73 All thermodynamic cycles require large temperature differentials for efficient operation In an external combustion engine the heater temperature always equals or exceeds the expansion temperature This means that the metallurgical requirements for the heater material are very demanding This is similar to a Gas turbine but is in contrast to an Otto engine or Diesel engine where the expansion temperature can far exceed the metallurgical limit of the engine materials because the input heat source is not conducted through the engine so engine materials operate closer to the average temperature of the working gas The Stirling cycle is not actually achievable the real cycle in Stirling machines is less efficient than the theoretical Stirling cycle The efficiency of the Stirling cycle is lower where the ambient temperatures are mild while it would give its best results in a cool environment such as northern countries winters Dissipation of waste heat is especially complicated because the coolant temperature is kept as low as possible to maximize thermal efficiency This increases the size of the radiators which can make packaging difficult Along with materials cost this has been one of the factors limiting the adoption of Stirling engines as automotive prime movers For other applications such as ship propulsion and stationary microgeneration systems using combined heat and power CHP high power density is not required 40 Applications editMain article Applications of the Stirling engine nbsp Dish Stirling from SESApplications of the Stirling engine range from heating and cooling to underwater power systems A Stirling engine can function in reverse as a heat pump for heating or cooling Other uses include combined heat and power solar power generation Stirling cryocoolers heat pump marine engines low power model aircraft engines 89 and low temperature difference engines See also editBore Cost of electricity by source Distributed generation John Ericsson Schmidt number Stirling engines Stroke Thermomechanical generator Francis Herbert WenhamCitations edit Stirling Engines G Walker 1980 Clarendon Press Oxford page 1 A Stirling engine is a mechanical device which operates on a closed regenerative thermodynamic cycle with cyclic compression and expansion of the working fluid at different temperature levels a b W R Martini 1983 Stirling Engine Design Manual 2nd ed 17 9 MB PDF NASA p 6 Retrieved 19 January 2009 The Hot Air Engine of the 19th Century hotairengines org Stirling s 1816 engine hotairengines org T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 Chapters 2 amp 3 Amontons Fire Wheel hotairengines org Guillaume Amontons Hot Air Engines hotairengines org Cayley 1807 air engine hotairengines org The Stirling 1816 hot air engine hotairengines org The patent of the Stirling 1816 hot air engine hotairengines org The Stirling 1827 air engine hotairengines org Parkinson amp Crossley hot air engine hotairengines org Arnott s air engine hotairengines org The Ericsson Caloric Engines hotairengines org The Dundee Stirling Engine hotairengines org The Stirling Dundee engine patent hotairengines org The Dundee Stirling Engine review and discussion hotairengines org The 1842 Stirling Engine presented by James Stirling to the Institution of Civil Engineers on June 10th 1845 Full text and discussion hotairengines org R Sier 1999 Hot Air Caloric and Stirling Engines A History Vol 1 1st Revised ed L A Mair ISBN 0 9526417 0 4 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 Chapter 2 2 English patent 4081 of 1816 Improvements for diminishing the consumption of fuel and in particular an engine capable of being applied to the moving of machinery on a principle entirely new as reproduced in part in C M Hargreaves 1991 Appendix B with full transcription of text in R Sier 1995 p page needed R Sier 1995 p 93 Sier 1995 p 92 A Nesmith 1985 A Long Arduous March Toward Standardization Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 18 January 2009 R Chuse B Carson 1992 1 Pressure Vessels The ASME Code Simplified McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 010939 7 A J Organ 2008a 1818 and All That Communicable Insight Retrieved 18 January 2009 R Sier 1995 p 94 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 p 30 Hartford Steam Boiler Hartford Steam Boiler Steam Power and the Industrial Revolution Retrieved 18 January 2009 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 Chapter 2 4 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 p 64 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 p 34 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 p 55 C M Hargreaves 1991 pp 28 30 Philips Technical Review 1947 Vol 9 No 4 p 97 C M Hargreaves 1991 p 61 C M Hargreaves 1991 p 77 Kockums The Stirling Engine An Engine for the Future Archived from the original on 30 August 2008 Retrieved 18 January 2009 Learning about renewable energy NREL National Renewable Energy Laboratory Archived from the original on 2 May 2016 Retrieved 25 April 2016 a b Power from the people BBC News 31 October 2003 Archived from the original on 1 November 2003 The boiler is based on the Stirling engine dreamed up by the Scottish inventor Robert Stirling in 1816 The technical name given to this particular use is Micro Combined Heat and Power or Micro CHP Formosa Fabien Frechette Luc G 1 August 2013 Scaling laws for free piston Stirling engine design Benefits and challenges of miniaturization Energy 57 796 808 doi 10 1016 j energy 2013 05 009 C M Hargreaves 1991 Chapter 2 5 G Walker 1971 Lecture notes for Stirling engine seminar University of Bath Reprinted in 1978 Page 1 1 Nomenclature Previous Survey Results StirlingBuilder com stirlingbuilder com Archived from the original on 26 May 2014 Dudek Jerzy Klimek Piotr Kolodziejak Grzegorz Niemczewska Joanna Zaleska Bartosz Joanna 2010 Landfill Gas Energy Technologies PDF Global Methane Initiative Instytut Nafty i Gazu US Environmental Protection Agency Archived PDF from the original on 25 July 2015 Retrieved 24 July 2015 H W Brandhorst J A Rodiek 2005 A 25 kW Solar Stirling Concept for Lunar Surface Exploration PDF In International Astronautics Federation ed Proceedings of the 56th International Astronautical Congress IAC 05 C3 P 05 Archived from the original PDF on 7 January 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2012 B Kongtragool S Wongwises 2003 A review of solar powered Stirling engines and low temperature differential Stirling engines Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 7 2 131 154 doi 10 1016 S1364 0321 02 00053 9 Production of Optimised Metal Foams for Stirling Engine Regenerators PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 May 2014 Retrieved 25 May 2014 A J Organ 1992 p 58 Stirling Cycle Engines A J Organ 2014 p 4 Koichi Hirata 1998 Design and manufacturing of a prototype engine National Maritime Research Institute Japan Archived from the original on 24 December 2008 Retrieved 18 January 2009 M Keveney 2000a Two Cylinder Stirling Engine animatedengines com Retrieved 18 January 2009 M Keveney 2000b Single Cylinder Stirling Engine animatedengines com Retrieved 18 January 2009 Quasiturbine Agence Quasiturbine Stirling Hot Air Engine Retrieved 18 January 2009 Ringbom Stirling Engines James R Senft 1993 Oxford University Press Ossian Ringbom of Borga Finland Hot air engine Archived 17 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine U S Patent no 856 102 filed 17 July 1905 issued 4 June 1907 Animated Engines animatedengines com Archived from the original on 11 November 2011 RABALLAND Thierry 2007 Etude de faisabilite d un concept d etancheite pour machines volumetriques a pistons oscillants PDF University of Bordeaux in French 12 14 Archived PDF from the original on 3 December 2008 Free Piston Stirling Engines G Walker et al Springer 1985 reprinted by Stirling Machine World West Richland WA The Thermo mechanical Generator E H Cooke Yarborough 1967 Harwell Memorandum No 1881 and 1974 Proc I E E Vol 7 pp 749 751 G M Benson 1973 Thermal Oscillators Proceedings of the 8th IECEC Philadelphia American Society of Mechanical Engineers pp 182 189 G M Benson 1977 Thermal Oscillators US patent 4044558 Granted to New Process Ind 30 August 1977 D Postle 1873 Producing Cold for Preserving Animal Food British Patent 709 granted 26 February 1873 DOUBLE ACTING DISPLACER WITH SEPARATE HOT AND COLD SPACE AND THE HEAT ENGINE WITH A DOUBLE ACTING DISPLACE Archived 14 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine WO 2012 062231 PCT CZ2011 000108 Schimdt George 13 November 2003 Radio Isotope Power Systems for the New Frontier Presentation to New Frontiers Program Pre proposal Conference PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2006 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Brumfiel Geoff 3 May 2018 NASA Tests New Nuclear Reactor For Future Space Travelers NPR Mari Silbey New alliance could make cable a catalyst for cleaner power ZDNet DEKA Research and Development Technologies and Applications Stirling Engines Archived from the original on 25 November 2012 Retrieved 28 November 2012 An Introduction to Low Temperature Differential Stirling Engines James R Senft 1996 Moriya Press Romanelli Alejandro 2020 Stirling engine operating at low temperature difference American Journal of Physics American Association of Physics Teachers AAPT 88 4 319 324 arXiv 2003 07157 Bibcode 2020AmJPh 88 319R doi 10 1119 10 0000832 ISSN 0002 9505 S2CID 212725151 a b A J Organ 1997 The Regenerator and the Stirling Engine Wiley pp ISBN 1 86058 010 6 A J Organ 2008b Why Air Communicable Insight Retrieved 18 January 2009 a b c C M Hargreaves 1991 p L G Thieme June 1981 High power baseline and motoring test results for the GPU 3 Stirling engine PDF NASA Technical Report Server OSTI 6321358 Archived from the original PDF on 24 May 2010 Retrieved 19 January 2009 A Romanelli 2017 Alternative thermodynamic cycle for the Stirling machine American Journal of Physics 85 12 926 931 arXiv 1704 01611 Bibcode 2017AmJPh 85 926R doi 10 1119 1 5007063 S2CID 119090897 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 Page 66 amp 229 A J Organ 1992 Chapter 3 1 3 2 A J Organ 2007 The Air Engine Stirling Cycle Power for a Sustainable Future Woodhead Publishing pp Sleeve notes ISBN 978 1 84569 231 5 F Starr 2001 Power for the People Stirling Engines for Domestic CHP PDF Ingenia 8 27 32 Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 18 January 2009 The Stirling Engine mpoweruk com Rallis C J Urieli I and Berchowitz D M A New Ported Constant Volume External Heat Supply Regenerative Cycle 12th IECEC Washington DC 1977 pp 1534 1537 Finkelstein T Generalized Thermodynamic Analysis of Stirling Engines Paper 118B Society of Automotive Engineers 1960 a b WADE Stirling Engines Archived from the original on 18 November 2008 Retrieved 18 January 2009 Krupp and Horn Earth The Sequel p 57 Z Herzog 2008 Schmidt Analysis Archived from the original on 26 April 2009 Retrieved 18 January 2009 K Hirata 1997 Schmidt Theory For Stirling Engines Retrieved 18 January 2009 MAKE Magazine 2006 Two Can Stirling Engine Retrieved 18 March 2012 a b Nightingale Noel P October 1986 Automotive Stirling Engine Mod II Design Report PDF NASA Technical Report Server Archived PDF from the original on 29 April 2017 Mcconaghy Robert 1986 Design of a Stirling Engine for Model Aircraft IECEC 490 493 General and cited references editE H Cooke Yarborough E Franklin J Geisow R Howlett C D West 1974 Harwell Thermo Mechanical Generator Proceedings of the 9th IECEC San Francisco American Society of Mechanical Engineers pp 1132 1136 Bibcode 1974iece conf 1132C E H Cooke Yarborough 1970 Heat Engines US patent 3548589 Granted to Atomic Energy Authority UK 22 December 1970 E H Cooke Yarborough 1967 A Proposal for a Heat Powered Nonrotating Electrical Alternator Harwell Memorandum AERE M881 T Finkelstein A J Organ 2001 Air Engines Professional Engineering Publishing ISBN 1 86058 338 5 C M Hargreaves 1991 The Philips Stirling Engine Elsevier Science ISBN 0 444 88463 7 A J Organ 1992 Thermodynamics and Gas Dynamics of the Stirling Cycle Machine Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 41363 X R Sier 1995 Reverend Robert Stirling D D A Biography of the Inventor of the Heat Economiser and Stirling Cycle Engine L A Mair ISBN 0 9526417 0 4 Further reading editS Backhaus G Swift 2003 Acoustic Stirling Heat Engine More Efficient than Other No Moving Parts Heat Engines Los Alamos National Laboratory Archived from the original on 1 August 2008 Retrieved 19 January 2009 BBC News 31 October 2003 Power from the people Retrieved 19 January 2009 W T Beale 1971 Stirling Cycle Type Thermal Device US patent 3552120 Granted to Research Corp 5 January 1971 Carbon Trust 2007 Micro CHP Accelerator Interim Report Executive summary Archived from the original on 28 March 2014 Retrieved 19 March 2012 R C Belaire 1977 Device for decreasing the start up time for stirling engines US patent 4057962 Granted to Ford Motor Company 15 November 1977 J Harrison 2008 What is micro generation Claverton Energy Research Group Retrieved 19 January 2009 J Hasci 2008 Modified Stirling Engine With Greater Power Density Create the Future Design Contest NASA amp SolidWorks Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Retrieved 19 January 2009 PASCO Scientific 1995 Instruction Manual and Experiment Guide for the PASCO scientific Model SE 8575 PDF Retrieved 18 January 2009 via Department of Physics UC Santa Barbara Y Timoumi I Tlili S B Nasrallah 2008 Performance Optimization of Stirling Engines Renewable Energy 33 9 2134 2144 doi 10 1016 j renene 2007 12 012 C D West 1970 Hydraulic Heat Engines Harwell Momorandum AERE R6522 S K Wickham 2008 Kamen s Revolt Union Leader Archived from the original on 22 May 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2009 Precer Group Solid Biofuel Powered Vehicle Technology PDF Retrieved 19 January 2009 K Hirata Palm Top Stirling Engine Retrieved 18 January 2009 D Liao The Working Principles Retrieved 18 January 2009 Micro Star International 2008 World s First Powerless Air Cooler on a Mainboard Archived from the original on 13 September 2008 Retrieved 19 January 2009 P H Ceperley 1979 A pistonless Stirling engine The traveling wave heat engine Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 66 5 1508 1513 Bibcode 1979ASAJ 66 1508C doi 10 1121 1 383505 P Fette About the Efficiency of the Regenerator in the Stirling Engine and the Function of the Volume Ratio Vmax Vmin Archived from the original on 8 March 2001 Retrieved 19 January 2009 P Fette A Twice Double Acting a Type Stirling Engine Able to Work with Compound Fluids Using Heat Energy of Low to Medium Temperatures Archived from the original on 8 March 2001 Retrieved 19 January 2009 D Haywood An Introduction to Stirling Cycle Machines PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 May 2013 Retrieved 25 December 2018 Z Herzog 2006 Stirling Engines Mont Alto Pennsylvania State University Archived from the original on 3 April 2007 Retrieved 19 January 2009 F Kyei Manu A Obodoako 2005 Solar Stirling Engine Water Pump Proposal Draft PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 19 January 2009 Lund University Department of Energy Science Division of Combustion Engines Stirling Engine Research Archived from the original on 19 April 2008 Retrieved 19 January 2009 D Phillips 1994 Why Aviation Needs the Stirling Engine Archived from the original on 19 January 2009 Retrieved 19 January 2009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stirling engines How Stirling Engines Work YouTube video How Beta type Stirling Engines Work YouTube video NASA Stirling Engine Based Nuclear Power Plant For Lunar Use on YouTube Stirling Cycle Machine Analysis by Israel Urieli How to build your Stirling engine 2017 Stirling Engines Design and Fabrication Simple Performance Prediction Method for Stirling Engine Inquiry into the Hot Air Engines of the 19th Century Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stirling engine amp oldid 1195626422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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