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Stirling engine
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.
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