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You are here: FreeEnergyNews.com > Directory > Stirling Engine

Stirling Engine
Generates Energy from Small External Temperature Gradients -- No Longer the Neglected Technology

Tap waste heat or cold. Displacer piston moves enclosed air back and forth between cold and hot reservoirs.

Page Contents:
FeaturingOverviewWorking Demo Units & KitsComparisonHow it worksApplicationsRelated Sites

Acknowledgemnt:
Some of the contents on this page have been adapted from

Wikipedia > Stirling Engine
Open Source Encyclopedia; June 15, 2004

Preface

"There are lots of little advantages that can be played with Stirling engines and phase change materials, but in general there is nothing there for utilization that will boost us to a higher level of energy utilization.

"What the world could use to good advantage is a cheap Stirling design.  Don't know of any great ones.  I only know of Dean Kaman's design with Decca Engineering (I think it is called, or Deka?) in Manchester, NH.  Cheap and simple, but not cheap and simple enough."

-- Ken Rauen, PES Network Inc, Science Advisor (Feb. 9, 2006)

Featuring

  • Stirling Energy Systems - Developing equipment for utility-scale renewable energy power plants and distributed electrical generating systems. Their most remarkable achievement is the recent contract with Southern California Edison to install a 4,600-acre solar system that will generate 500 megawatts. (PESWiki; Aug. 11)
  • Sunpower Unveils 2007 Micro Co-Generation Technology - Device uses Stirling engine to efficiently use natural gas to generate heat and 1 kW of electricity. Designed for kitchen installation in Europe. Brings distributed energy concept home. (PESN; Mar. 3, 2006)
  • WhisperGen Gearing Home Use - Whisper Tech has received a $300 million contract to supply tens of thousands of its WhisperGen units to homes in the UK.  Powered by natural gas, it provides electricity and heat at a cost savings and cut in CO2 emissions.
  • Open Sourcing > Stirling Engine -- Simplified Plans - Collection of proof of concept designs that you can build for as little as $99.  "This small-scale model situated on one boiling cup of boiling water and cooled by a cube of ice, can turn for 35 minutes."  English translation of photologie.net French site, by Pure Energy Systems.
  • Book > Around the World by Stirling Engine by Brent H. Van Arsdell
    Probably the best general book on Stirling engines. Explains how Stirling engines work.  Covers all the current power producing uses of Stirling engines along with how to contact the people who build them.  Covers everything from Stirling engines in military submarines, to a Stirling engine that powers the rotisserie for an Oklahoma mechanic's barbecue.
Simplified Stirling Engine

Overview

And from Wikipedia:

The Stirling engine was invented in 1816 by the Rev. Robert Stirling who 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 primitive materials of the time. Stirling engines convert heat (actually, any temperature differential) directly to movement: they use a displacer piston to move enclosed air back and forth between cold and hot reservoirs. At the hot reservoir the air expands and pushes a power piston, producing work and displacing the air to the cold reservoir. There the air contracts and pulls the power piston, closing the cycle.

In more sophisticated Stirling engine a regenerator, typically a mesh of wire, is located between the reservoirs. As the air 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.

Stirling engines can also work in reverse: when applying motion, a temperature differential appears between the reservoirs. Incidentally, one of their modern uses is in supercooling. However they are difficult to construct and require precise machining, and thus never replaced the steam engine despite being much more fuel efficient than steam engines or even the modern internal combustion and Diesel engines.

Stirling engine types

Stirling Engines come in three distinct types:

  • An alpha Stirling contains two separate power pistons, one "hot" piston and one "cold" piston. The hot piston is situated after the higher temperature heat exchanger and the cold piston is situated after the low temperature heat exchanger. This type of engine has a very high power-to-volume ratio but has technical problems due to the (often) high temperature of the "hot" piston and its seals.
  • A beta Stirling has a single power piston arranged coaxially with a displacer piston. The displacer piston does not extract any power from the expanding gas but only serves to shuttle the working gas from the hot heat exchanger to the cold heat exchanger. This engine does not require moving seals in the hot portion of the engine and can achieve high compression ratios due to pistons being able to overlap in their motions.
  • A gamma Stirling is simply a beta Stirling in which the power piston is not mounted coaxially to its displacer piston. This configuration produces a lower compression ratio but is often mechanically simpler and often used in multi-cylinder Stirling engines.

Working Demo Units & Kits

  • NewEnergyShop.com / Sterling-Engines.net - " Sophisticated demonstration models, using alternative energy technologies for universities, schools and interested individuals like Stirling and Steam engines, fuel cells, photovoltaic objects, toys and more."

Comparison

From: ken rauen
Sent: Tuesday, June 15, 2004 10:51 AM


Stirling engines qualify for "free energy" designation when they allow us to tap previously inaccessible sources of naturally occurring energy. Stirling cycle engines are very efficient for a given temperature difference between the heat source and the heat sink. Actually, steam engines (the Rankine cycle) fall into this category, too; depending upon what kind of hardware and its maintenance you prefer, one or the other will be preferred. Steamers have fewer parts and higher power density. Other fluids, such as a variety of refrigerants, can be used instead of water. Stirlings avoid fluid containment problems, as they can run with air as the working fluid, and will have less maintenance issues.

Solar collectors are a source of low grade thermal energy that has largely gone untapped for electricity. Mount Stirlings of a variety similar to what is show in the aforementioned website, though more robustly designed and constructed, along the back wall of a solar collector, and let the cold side of the Stirling engine bank radiate the waste heat into the shade. 100 W per square foot insulation can translate to almost 10 W/sq ft of electricity with the hot side of the collector reaching only 150F with ambient T at 70F. No high-tech materials are needed. A 25 square foot collector can generate about 200 W of cheap electricity! This competes with solar cells.

Steamers can utilize this size very well with a tube boiler and just one expander connected to one generator. I recommend a "steamer."

Ken Rauen
Science Advisor, Pure Energy Systems


How it works

Applications

Related Sites

Indexes

Information media

See also

Index created by Sterling D. Allan, June 14, 2004
Last updated August 12, 2007

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