STIRLING ENGINES

In 1817 the Scottish minister Robert Stirling invented a "hot-gas motor".
Stirling engines theoretically achieve the highest possible energy conversion efficiency of all heat engines. They can use any kind of energy and used as a generator, motor, heat-pump or cooling system they produce extremely low emissions. Nevertheless the Stirling engines have still not achieved commercial breakthrough as a mass product.


Working Principles

Stirling engines as thermodynamic machines are subject to the law of Carnot, ideally achieving the efficiency (n):

n(th)=(T1-T2)/T1

T1 is the higher temperature in °K
T2 is the lower temperature in °K

With increasing temperature differences the theoretically achievable thermodynamic efficiency increases toward 100%. The development of Stirling engines over the last decades has focused on constructing high-efficiency machines through high temperature differences. The result were Stirling engines filled with helium/hydrogen and sealed, working with temperatures of up to 800°C, with a pressure of 50 to 190 bar.


Schematic Presentation



Model of a Stirling Engine


Advantages


Problems


Additional Uses



Development Trends

Because of the high temperature, pressure and frequency for high-performance Stirling engines the costs are very high. The present trend is to build Stirling engines involving temperatures in excess of 1,000°C at the hot end and toward the employment of new materials (ceramic, special metals) and improved manufacturing technologies.


Sources:BOMIN SOLAR, SIGNON SAN DIEGO, FUTURE DRIVE, WORLD WATCH.

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