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Tuesday, 02 December 2008 |
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In its simplest description, a Stirling engine consists of a cylinder containing a gas and a piston
recovering the mechanical energy. This page proposes to discover the operation principles of this engine.
This is a gradual process by studying the following steps:
- the four basic phases
- The displacer function
- The Pressure-Volume diagram and the cycle efficiency
First observation : the gas used is confined, it's always the same. Another feature : energy is supplied
from outside of the cylinder, from where the designations “hot air engine” or
“external combustion engine” which one can read sometimes.
The thermodynamic cycle of the Stirling engine is very simple : it includes 4 phases during which the gas undergoes the following transformations :
The burner (the hot source) provides thermal energy. We easily imagine that the pressure and the gas temperature increase during this phase.

The volume increases whereas the pressure decreases. It is during this transformation that driving energy is produced.

The projected water (the cold source) recovers thermal energy. The temperature and the pressure decrease during this phase.

The pressure of gas increases whereas its volume decreases. One must provide mechanical energy to gas for this period.

One can see below the sequence of these various phases.

The realization of an engine such as the one described above would be difficult : kindle the burner,
extinguish it, sprinkle, then stop cooling, with many successive thermal shocks….
This is why one will introduce an artifice providing solutions to these problems: the displacer. This last
modifies neither the pressure nor the volume of gas, but requires it to be near the hot source located at
the top, or near the cold source located at the bottom.
Explanations through drawings :

The volume remains constant, but the displacer, while going down, sends the gas from the lower part (cold) to the top (hot).

The displacer follows the engine piston during the expansion so that the gas remains in contact only with the hot source.

The volume remains constant, but the displacer, while going up, sends the gas from the higher part (hot) to the lower part (cold).

The displacer, during compression, remains at the top so that the gas is always in contact only with the cold source.
The complete cycle is shown below. This engine is called the beta engine, its operation is studied more thoroughly on this site.


On the diagram above, one can see :
- The variation of hot volume, on the upper part, during the cycle (red zone).
- The variation of cold volume, at the bottom, between displacer and operating piston, during the cycle
(blue zone).
The principle of operation, above exposed, can be represented on a diagram called “ Pressure-Volume diagram” or PV diagram.

On this diagram, one easily sees the four phases detailed above, by not
forgetting that expansion and compression are at constant temperatures (TM and Tm).
The coloured surface, ranging between the four segments describing the cycle, is representative of the
work collected during a cycle.
The demonstration is provided below.

At every moment, the force which is exerted on the piston is F = S x P where S is the surface of
the piston and P the instantaneous pressure.
The elementary work provided during a short time “dt” is equal to the instantaneous force multiplied
by displacement “dy " of the piston during this period “dt”.
dW = F x dy
or
dW = S x P x dy
or, if it is noticed that S x dy = dV , the variation in volume during the period of time "dt"
dW = P x dV
On the PV diagram, this last expression is the elementary surface located under each curve. See opposite.
The work is positive under the curve of expansion because dV>0. Work is negative under the curve of
compression because dV<0.
The resulting work during a cycle is represented by surface under the curve of expansion decreased
by surface under the curve of compression. Therefore, it is the surface between the curves.
The efficiency of the engine is equal to the ratio between the mechanical energy actually recovered and the total mechanical energy generated during expansion. (One supposes that the energy useful for isochoric heating is entirely recovered during isochoric cooling, it is the function of the regenerator studied in the "Regenerator" page ). The representative symbol for efficiency is ρ :

with :

and

This gives: :

NB : the temperatures T are expressed in Kelvin (add 273 to the Celsius temperatures)
This site was created and is maintained by Pierre Gras.
Thank you with all the people who contributed their shares: articles, photographs, vidéos, worksheets…
The author is opened with any suggestion allowing to improve this site for happiness of everybody.
Finally, a big thank you to Robert Stirling !
"moteurstirling.com" site by Pierre Gras is licensed under a Creative Commons License.