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Stirling engine

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Thermodynamic cycles
Atkinson cycle
Brayton/Joule cycle
Carnot cycle
Combined cycle
Diesel cycle
Ericsson cycle
Hirn cycle
Kalina cycle
Lenoir Cycle
Linde-Hampson cycle
Miller cycle
Mixed/Dual Cycle
Otto cycle
Rankine cycle
Scuderi cycle
Stirling cycle
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A Stirling engine and generator set with 55 kW electrical output, for combined heat and power applications. Click image for detailed description.
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A Stirling engine and generator set with 55 kW electrical output, for combined heat and power applications. Click image for detailed description.

The Stirling engine, is a heat engine of the external combustion piston engine type whose heat-exchange process allows for near-ideal efficiency in conversion of heat into mechanical movement by following the Carnot cycle as closely as is practically possible with given materials.

Its invention is credited to the Scottish clergyman Rev. Robert Stirling in 1816 who made significant improvements to earlier designs and took out the first patent. He was later assisted in its development by his engineer brother James Stirling.

General description

The inventors sought to create a safer alternative to the steam engines of the time, whose boilers often exploded due to the high pressure of the steam and the inadequate materials. Stirling engines will convert any temperature difference directly into movement.

The Stirling engine works by the repeated heating and cooling of a usually sealed amount of working gas, usually air or other gases such as hydrogen or helium. This is accomplished by moving the gas between hot and cold heat exchangers, the hot heat exchanger being a chamber in thermal contact with an external heat source, e.g. a fuel burner, and the cold heat exchanger being a chamber in thermal contact with an external heat sink, e.g. air fins.

The gas follows the behaviour described by the gas laws which describe how a gas' pressure, temperature and volume are related. When the gas is heated, because it is in a sealed chamber, the pressure rises and this then acts on the power piston to produce a power stroke. When the gas is cooled the pressure drops and this means that less work needs to be done by the piston to recompress the gas on the return stroke, giving a net gain in power available on the shaft. The working gas flows cyclically between the hot and cold heat exchangers.

The working gas is sealed within the piston cylinders, so there is no exhaust gas (other than that incidental to heat production if combustion is used as the heat source). No valves are required, unlike other types of piston engines.

To summarize, the Stirling engine uses the potential energy difference between its hot end and cold end to establish a cycle of a fixed amount of gas expanding and contracting within the engine, thus converting a temperature difference across the machine into mechanical power.

The greater the temperature difference between the heat source and cold source, the easier it is for the Stirling engine to operate and the less efficient the design has to be for the engine to run. But small demonstration engines have been built which will run on a temperature difference of around 15 degrees C, e.g. between the palm of a hand and the surrounding air, or between room temperature and melting water ice. ([Ref]) , ([Ref -pdf])

Engine

Some Stirling engines use a separate displacer piston to move the working gas back and forth between cold and hot reservoirs. Others rely on interconnecting the power pistons of multiple cylinders to move the working gas, with the cylinders held at different temperatures.

In true Stirling engines a regenerator, typically a mass of wire, is located between the reservoirs. As the gas cycles between the hot and cold sides, its heat is transferred to and from the regenerator. In some designs, the displacer piston is itself the regenerator. This regenerator contributes to the efficiency of the Stirling cycle.

The ideal Stirling engine cycle has the same theoretical efficiency as a Carnot heat engine for the same input and output temperatures. The thermodynamic efficiency is higher than steam engines (or even some modern internal combustion and Diesel engines).

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Configurations

Engineers classify Stirling engines into three distinct types:

Rhombic Drive Beta Stirling Design
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Rhombic Drive Beta Stirling Design

Changes to the configuration of mechanical Stirling engines continue to interest engineers and inventors alike. Notably, some are in hot pursuit of the rotary Stirling engine; the goal is to convert power from the Stirling cycle directly into torque, a similar goal to that of the design of the rotary combustion engine.

There is also a field of "Free piston" stirling cycles engines, including those with liquid pistons and those with diaphragms as pistons. [See the book "Free Piston Stirling Cycle Engines" by G. Walker]

An alternative to the mechanical Stirling engine is the fluidyne pump, which uses the Stirling cycle via a hydraulic piston. In its most basic form it contains a working gas, a liquid and two check valves for moving parts. The work produced by the fluidyne goes into pumping the liquid.

Heat sources

Any temperature difference will power a Stirling engine and the term "external combustion engine" often applied to it is misleading. A heat source may be the result of combustion but can also be solar, geothermal, or nuclear or even biological. Likewise a "cold source" below the ambient temperature can be used as the temperature difference. (see here). A cold source may be the result of a cryogenic fluid or iced water. Since small differential temperatures require large mass flows, parasitic losses in pumping the heating or cooling fluids rise and tend to reduce the efficiency of the cycle.

Because a heat exchanger separates the working gas from the heat source, a wide range of combustion fuels can be used, or the engine can be adapted to run on waste heat from some other process. Since the combustion products do not contact the internal moving parts of the engine, a Stirling engine can run on landfill gas containing siloxanes without the accumulation of silica that damages internal combustion engines running on this fuel. The life of lubricating oil is longer than for internal-combustion engines.

The U.S. Department of Energy in Washington, NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, and Stirling Technology Co. of Kennewick, Wash., are developing a free-piston Stirling converter for a Stirling Radioisotope Generator. This device would use a plutonium source to supply heat.

There is a potential for nuclear powered Stirling engines in electric power generation plants. Replacing the steam turbines of nuclear power plants with Stirling engines would greatly simplify the plant, yield greater efficiency, and provide above all, a much greater margin of safety, while reducing radioactive by-products.

Strengths of Stirling engines

Problems with Stirling engines

History and development

Devices called air engines have been recorded from as early as 1699 around the time when the laws of gases were first set out. The English inventor Sir George Cayley is known to have devised air engines c. 1807. Robert Stirling's innovative contribution of 1816 was what he called the 'Economiser' now known as the regenerator which acts to retain heat in the hot portion of the engine as the air passes to the cold part and thus improve the efficiency. The portion of the engine known as the exchanger, connecting the hot and cold sides, Stirling's contribution, enabled him to make practical use of the hot air engine, and has been a component of every air engine since that is called a Stirling engine.

During the nineteenth century the Stirling engine found applications anywhere a source of low to medium power was required, a role that was eventually usurped by the electric motor at the century's end.

It was also employed in reverse as a heat pump to produce early refrigeration.

In the late 1940s the Philips Electronics company in The Netherlands were searching for a versatile electricity generator to enable worldwide expansion of sales of its electronic devices in areas with no reliable electricity infrastructure. The company put a huge R&D research effort into Stirling engines building on research it had started in the 1930s and which lasted until the 1970s. The only lasting commercial spin-off from this for Philips was its reversed Stirling engine: the Stirling cryocooler.

Kockums[link], the Swedish shipbuilder, had built at least 10 commercially successful Stirling powered submarines during the 1980s. As of 2005 they have started to carry compressed oxygen with them. (No endurance stated.)

Whisper Tech, a New Zealand firm with offices in Christchurch has developed an "AC Micro Combined Heat and Power" stirling cycle engine. These are gas-fired central heating boilers which sell power back into the electricity grid. They announced in 2004 that they were producing 80,000 units for the residential market in the United Kingdom.

On August 11 2005, Southern California Edison [announced] an agreement to purchase solar powered Stirling engines from Stirling Energy Systems[link] over a twenty year period and in quantity (20,000 units) sufficient to generate 500 megawatts of electricity. These systems - to be installed on a 4,500 acre (19 km²) solar farm - will use mirrors to direct and concentrate sunlight onto the engines which will in turn drive generators.

Los Alamos National Laboratory has developed an "Acoustic Stirling Heat Engine" [link] with no moving parts. It converts heat into intense acoustic power.

United States government labs have developed a modern Stirling engine design known as the Stirling Radioisotope Generator for use in space exploration that uses only a single displacer, to reduce moving parts. It makes use of energy transfer though high energy acoustics and is used to generate electricity for deep space probes for decades. The heat source is a dry solid nuclear fuel slug for the hot side and the cold of space as the cold side.

Some believe that the ability of the Stirling engine to convert geothermal energy to electricity and then to hydrogen may well hold the key to replacement of fossil fuels in a future global economy.

Stirling cryocoolers

Stirling engines will also work in reverse: when applying motion to the shaft, a temperature difference appears between the reservoirs. One of their modern uses is in refrigeration and cryogenics. The first Stirling-cycle cryocooler was developed at Philips in the 1950s and commercialized in such places as liquid nitrogen production plants. The Philips Cryogenics business evolved until it was split off in 1990 to form the Stirling Cryogenics & Refrigeration BV, [Stirling] The Netherlands. This company is still active in the development and manufacturing Stirling cryocoolers and cryogenic cooling systems.

A wide variety of smaller size Stirling cryocoolers are commercially available for tasks such as the cooling of sensors.

Thermoacoustic refrigeration uses a Stirling cycle in a working gas which is created by high amplitude sound waves.

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