Stirling Engine with Hydraulic Transmission

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Revision as of 14:36, 22 January 2011 by Rasmus (talk | contribs) (fixed some wording and added "applications" section)
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Basically, the output from a heat engine can drive the movement of a hydraulic fluid. A Stirling engine can operate quietly from any heat source to generate mechanical power (work). It can be coupled directly to a hydraulic transmission, although only a handful of projects have explored this possibility over the decades. Heat sources include solar concentrating power (CSP) as well as biomass. A NASA Project existed in 1988 - details here: Media:NASA Stirling Hydraulic concept.pdf

Applications and Product Ecology

  • In future versions of the GVCS, such a concept may be used to power LifeTrac, for example (Stirling "PowerCube").
  • couple to pumps for pumping water (irrigation)
  • biomass: heat can be derived from combustion or from pyrolysis, where biochar would be a useful, carbon-negative byproduct. With biomass-powered Stirling, one single engine could handle all sorts of different biomass, whether solid, liquid or gaseous. There is no need for tedious clean-up of fuel.
  • liquid piston Stirling engine

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