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Stirling engine
#1

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.

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.
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#2
Presented by:
MAIER Christoph
GIL Arnaud
AGUILERA Rafael
SHUANG Li
YU Xue




Introduction

" These imperfections have been in a great
measure removed by time and especially by the
genius of the distinguished Bessemer. If Bessemer
Iron or steel had been known thirty five or forty
years ago there is a scarce doubt that the air
engine would have been a great success It
remains for some skilled and ambitious mechanist
in a future age to repeat it under more favorable
circumstances and with complete success "
(Written in the year 1876 by Dr. Robert Stirling
[1790-1878])

The Stirling Engine was invented by Robert Stirling. This device was born as a competence to the vapor machine, since a Stirling Engine works with smaller pressures than the device created by Watt and it did not require a qualified train engineer. At the end of s.XIX with the development of the internal combustion engine and the appearance of electric engines, the machine of this study was forgotten. Nowadays the technology that involves the invention of Robert Stirling is in completely development because of the fact that now very useful applications are available. This document travels in the history of this curious device looking for reasons of this incredible development in this called high technology with its different applications and doing an analysis from the point of view of the economy. This project explains the principle function of the engine with a deep investigation. And we show how the Sterling Engine in combination with renewable energy sources can be part of a sustainable energy supply.


for more details, please visit
http://exergy.se/goran/hig/re/07/stirling.pdf
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#3
[attachment=15301]
Stirling engines can be hard to understand. Here are the key points. Every
Stirling engine has a sealed cylinder with one part hot and the other cold. The working gas inside the engine (which is often air, helium, or hydrogen) is moved
by a mechanism from the hot side to the cold side. When the gas is on the hot side
it expands and pushes up on a piston. When it moves back to the cold side it
contracts. Properly designed Stirling engines have two power pulses per
revolution, which can make them very smooth running. Two of the more common
types are two piston Stirling engines and displacer-type Stirling engines. The two
piston type Stirling engine has two power pistons. The displacer type Stirling
engine has one power piston and a displacer piston.
Displacer Type:
The displacer type Stirling engine is shown here. The space below the displacer
piston is continuously heated by a heat source. The space above the displacer
piston is continuously cooled. The disp
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#4

[attachment=6504]


Introduction:
An engine is a machine that converts energy into useful work. A Stirling engine is a heat engine that operates by cyclic compression and expansion of air or other gas, the working fluid, at different temperature levels such that there is a net conversion of heat energy to mechanical work. Stirling Engine was invented by Robert Stirling in 1816.
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#5

[attachment=4331]
STIRLING ENGINE


abstract


Best teaching and learning for any engineering students device especially in the field of thermodynamics.
Unique technology.
An innovation with hundreds of application.
An innovation with a mission to save the earth.
Fuel independency.
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