
Illustration of a low temperature differential (LTD) hot air engine. 1. Power piston, 2. Cold end of cylinder, 3.Displacer piston 4. Hot end of cylinder Q1. Heat in , Q2. Heat out.
'hot air engine' (historically simply 'air engine' or '
caloric engine') is a catch-all term for any
heat engine which uses the expansion and contraction of
air under the influence of a temperature change to convert
thermal energy into
mechanical work. It includes closed cycle devices such as the
Stirling engine and open cycle devices such as those devised by
Sir George Cayley and
John Ericsson. Its use is sometimes extended to describe engines employing other permanent gasses as their working fluid, but specifically excludes any engine performing a
thermodynamic cycle such as the
Rankine cycle, in which the working fluid undergoes a
phase change. Also excluded are conventional
internal combustion engines in which heat is added to the working fluid by combustion of fuel within the working cylinder - continuous combustion types such as
George Brayton's Ready Motor and the related
gas turbine could be seen as borderline cases.
The air is repeatedly heated and cooled in a
cylinder and the resulting expansion and contraction is used to move a
piston and produce useful
mechanical work.
[1]
[2]
History
The expansive property of heated air was known to the ancients and
Hero of Alexandria's ''Pneumatica'' contains descriptions of devices which might be used to automatically open temple doors when a fire was lit on a sacrificial altar. Devices called
hot air engines, or simply 'air engines', have been recorded from as early as
1699, around the time when the
laws of gases were first set out, and early patents include those of
Henry Wood, Vicar of High Ercall near
Coalbrookdale Shropshire (English patent 739 of 1759)
and
Thomas Mead, an engineer from Sculcoats Yorkshire (English patent 979 of 1791) , the latter in particular containing the essential elements of a
displacer type engine (Mead termed it the transferrer). It is unlikely that either of these patents resulted in an actual engine and the earliest workable example was probably the open cycle furnace gas engine of the English inventor
Sir George Cayley c.
1807
[3]
[4]
[5]
It is likely that
Robert Stirling's air engine of
1818 which incorporated his innovative ''Economiser'' patented in
1816 was the first to be put to practical work. The economiser, now known as the
regenerator, stored heat from the hot portion of the engine as the air passed to the cold side, and released heat to the cooled air as it returned to the hot side. This innovation improved the efficiency of Stirling's engine and should be a component of every air engine worthy of the title
Stirling engine. A full description is available at that article.
Thermodynamic cycle
A hot air engine
thermodynamic cycle can (ideally) be made out of 3 or more
processes (typical 4). The processes can be any of these:
★
isothermal process (at constant temperature, maintained with heat added or removed from a heat source or sink)
★
isobaric process (at constant pressure)
★
isometric / isochoric process (at constant volume)
★
adiabatic process (no heat is added or removed from the working fluid)
★
★
isentropic process,
reversible adiabatic process (no heat is added or removed from the working fluid - and the
entropy is constant)
★
isenthalpic process (the
enthalpy is constant)
Some examples are as follows:
Yet another example is
Vuilleumier refrigeration.
[6]
See also
★
Carnot heat engine
★
Timeline of heat engine technology
References
1. Sterling (or Hot air) engine
2. Air Engines: The History, Science, and Reality of the Perfect Engine, Theodor Finkelstein and Allan J. Organ, , , ASME Press, 2001, ISBN 0791801713
3. Stirling engine history
4. Hot air caloric and stirling engines. Vol.1, A history, Robert Sier, , , L.A. Mair, 1999, ISBN 0-9526417-0-4
5. Detailed contents of the book ''Hot air caloric and stirling engines. Vol.1, A history''
6. Stirling and Vuilleumier heat pumps: design and applications, Wurm, Jaroslav, , , McGraw-Hill, 1991, ISBN 0-07-053567-1
More references
External links
★
Introduction to Sterling-Cycle Machines
★
Pioneers in Air Engine Designs (Select the desired biography)
★
Stirling Engine's Function Principle