There is no mechanism by means of which the internal temperature of the gas in a Stirling engine is "constrained" by the hot heat exchanger temperature or source input temperature (hot reservoir). Infact the previous chart shows just that.Nobody wrote: ↑Sun Dec 05, 2021 10:46 am...
Even if you could eliminate all "excess heat", depending on the definition, the heat of adiabatic compression would still occur when the cycle reverses. That heat would need to go somewhere? It is only the heat of compression that I'm talking about. If it stays in the working fluid, you will get adiabatic compression, and the Stirling engine will produce Zero net power.
The reason IC engines can live with adiabatic compression is that the heat added isn't constrained by a maximum hot exchanger temperature.
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That curved line is the internal temperature of the engine going above the input (hot reservoir) temperature during the compression stroke.
The "heat of compression" is simply added to the "normal" input heat from the heat source giving the engine that much more power - a contribution of atmospheric pressure.
Both (the heat from both sources) are then converted to work during the subsequent expansion.
Your idea, or insistance that the compression work done by the atmosphere is somehow a bad thing, somehow "negative" is a bit perplexing, but nevertheless wrong.
After the expansion and cooling, the piston motion stops and reverses as atmospheric pressure accelerates the piston for the compression stroke, the piston, in a Thermal Lag type engine, then drives the gas, compresses it, really SLAMMING it, directly BACK INTO the hot end, back to the heat source, much like a fire piston or a diesel engine.
That is not draining power resulting in "zero work". It is concentrating the heat for an explosive rebound and power drive, for the power stroke work output.
That is easy to see in the thermal Lag, a bit more difficult in other more complex engines, but there also, a similar process of heat concentration takes place. (compression stroke) followed by expansion.