Thermal Engine

The stiring engine was invented by Rev Robert Stirling in 1816.
The engine works on a very basic principal.
When air or gas is heated it expands, conversly when cooled it contracts.
This pressure differential can drive a power piston to extract the work.
The trick is how do you heat and cool air very quickly?
By using a large piston to shuttle the air between the hot and cold plates fast heating and cooling cycles are possible. Heat is transferred form the hot plate to the cold plate. The pressure differential disapates as the two plates equalise in tempreture.
As long as the tempreture difference is maintained then the engine will run.
This engine has two pistons, a smaller drive piston to extract power and a larger piston to displace the air between the hot and cold regions. Connected by push rods and linkages to a crankshaft the pistons are ninety degrees out of phase.
This engine can run on a very small tempreture difference, the power produced however is small.
2 Comments:
nice one :)
I'm building a solar project for a house building company that is building 600 buildings (3 houses in each) in two rural locations in Israel in a 'Eco Neighborhood'.
The project involves a mixture of botanic cooling using (native) vegetation, geothermal and wind cooling, solar and wind heating, and ice storage at off peak hours (low cost local 'waste' energy from the electric co), and perhaps a small PV unit. The main point is to get solar energy while encouraging planting more trees and shrubs.
Each roof will be producing 15 kWh of power for and average of 4.5 hours a day (that is the data for PV in Israel, and thermal should be similar).
I have some ideas for developing a new type of heat engine, and am willing to pay for the development.
Please contact me. Our time zone is GMT -2, (it 6:22 in the morning here, by you its 3:22 afternoon)
My accountant is a Kiwi... (Youll hear him recommending someone: "That guy's also a good guy although he's not from New Zealand...")
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