Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Discussion on Stirling or "hot air" engines (all types)
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GuernseyPete
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Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by GuernseyPete »

If a heat pump has a COP of >3, could a Stirling Engine use the heat energy to both power the heat pump and generate additional power?

EG Heat pump requires 1KW to salvage a further 2Kw from the environment, resulting in >=3Kw output. Therefore 1Kw input to heat pump and 2Kw available surplus. Even at 50% efficiency that should result in 1Kw of usable energy, shouldn’t it? Is my maths wrong or what am I missing?
Tom Booth
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Tom Booth »

This is from an old newspaper advertisement:
A heat pump doesn't make heat-it simply moves the heat that's supplied by nature. And since it takes less energy to move beat than it does to make it, a heat pump is a highly energy-efficient system. So. efficient, in fact, that it can deliver more than two units of heat for each unit of electricity needed to move· it.
From The News-Herald, 22 July 1982

I think heat pump technology has only improved since then.

To my mind heat is fuel for a heat engine, so a heat pump would basically be just a fuel pump to move the available heat in the environment to a location where it could be utilized by a heat engine.

Most engines have no problem whatsoever using some of their own output to operate a fuel pump.

But I've seen this idea debated a dozen times over the years, so why hasn't someone just gone ahead and tried it?

You have two systems not many people actually understand. Heat pumps are a rather specialized field, likewise heat engines are a bit on the obscure side. How to actually combine the two to work harmoniously together is something of an engineering challenge or I would have tried it myself a long time ago. But until I see someone actually do so, I wouldn't say it's impossible.
GuernseyPete
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by GuernseyPete »

If nobody can suggest a reason why this wouldn’t work, I’m going to go ahead and try it. The implications are too far reaching to ignore and I can’t think of a reason why it wouldn’t work. I also asked the same question on the “Just have a think” YouTube channel and, so far, nobody has responded. It will take me a while to build it with my limited engineering skills and equipment!
Fool
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Fool »

Your question gets asked on several different forums, and answered better than I can do here. Here is one link:

https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/h ... to%20heat).

I would look for a good off the shelf Stirling Engine that gets your requested 50% efficiency at your requested 1000 Watts power requirement first. Then look at it's specifications very carefully. Or you could, if you know how, build one to those parameters. Remember a heat pump's COP is dependent on it's temperature difference. Here is a link on that:

https://clade-es.com/blog/what-is-the-c ... heat-pump/

Here is another:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coeffic ... erformance

And finally:

https://www.livescience.com/55944-perpe ... hines.html

Good luck with your ventures.
GuernseyPete
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by GuernseyPete »

Thank you for these links, I will give it a try. The physics forum link wasn’t helpful as they seemed to equate the configuration to a ‘free lunch’ or perpetual motion machine! There was also a claim about it breaking the 2nd law of thermodynamics, all of which demonstrated a lack of understanding about how these technologies work. They seem to have missed the point that heat pumps harvest energy from the environment that already exists. And heat pumps are used widely these days with COPs in excess of 3, I was being conservative.

I’m less knowledgeable about the efficiency of Stirling engines so I’ll focus on this first. Thanks again.
Tom Booth
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Tom Booth »

GuernseyPete wrote: Tue Oct 24, 2023 12:59 pm Thank you for these links, I will give it a try. The physics forum link wasn’t helpful as they seemed to equate the configuration to a ‘free lunch’ or perpetual motion machine! There was also a claim about it breaking the 2nd law of thermodynamics, all of which demonstrated a lack of understanding about how these technologies work. They seem to have missed the point that heat pumps harvest energy from the environment that already exists. And heat pumps are used widely these days with COPs in excess of 3, I was being conservative.

I’m less knowledgeable about the efficiency of Stirling engines so I’ll focus on this first. Thanks again.
If you are seriously going to try such a thing, IMO it is unlikely to work if the focus is on transporting heat only

If you compress a gas it gives off heat which heat can be used to expand a gas in a heat engine to produce work

Pretty obviously this is a loosing battle as you can't get any more work out from expanding the gas than you put into compressing it. On top of that there will be loses

However an air conditioner with a COP of say 3.5 is throwing away heat. A heat pump with a COP of 3.5 is using heat but is also acting as an air conditioner at the point where the heat is being removed.

A Stirling engine can run on either heat or, in effect, cold, so, since a heat pump and air conditioner are essentially the same device, if there is any possibility of such a thing working, I would think it would depend on utilizing both the heat and the cold produced by the heat pump as it actually does both simultaneously.

Heat is taken away from one area and put into another.

Overall I would say the focus should be more on the production of cold. Infact, arguably, we already have at least one working example of a simple air conditioner and heat pump operating "perpetually" on ambient heat:

https://youtu.be/Rq3K6Ma0wIU?si=8aGDEZ-0kbeFNHaZ
Tom Booth
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Tom Booth »

Above I meant to say "air conditioner and heat ENGINE".

Also the COP of a cooler can be effectively doubled by using water cooling on the condenser side.

That is, the compressor pumps/compresses the refrigerant into the condenser tubing. The condenser tubes, of course get hot, but if these are water cooled to remove the heat, because of the thermal capacity of water the heat can be removed more efficiently, which also means the compressor has less work, but the cooling capacity is increased. So instead of a COP of 2.5 or whatever, that could be increased to 5.0

So you can significantly increase the COP of a cooling system by dumping heat.

I think you can also increase the COP of a heat pump by heating the expansion/cooling tubes, say with solar, but it is more difficult to compress hot refrigerant than it is to compress cold refrigerant, so there seems to be a greater advantage to lowering the temperature to produce cold to run the Stirling engine rather than raising it.

There is a vast supply of ambient heat if you can use cold to create a temperature difference. The cold is also, theoretically easier to maintain, since the Stirling engine itself runs on (or consumes) heat and "rejects" heat at a lower temperature.
GuernseyPete
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by GuernseyPete »

I agree, the temperature difference is key. Looking into the efficiency ratings for Stirling Engines I can see my target of 50% efficiency is currently unrealistic. My goal won’t be to use the configuration to produce anything more than a self-sustaining heat pump with a useful heat output . With a thermal efficiency of, say, 33% it would be necessary to use a closed system to utilise the heat energy lost in the Stirling Engine or somehow transfer the pump and compressor directly from the heat pump. Still lots to think about!
Tom Booth
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Tom Booth »

Any update on this project?
KyleT73
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by KyleT73 »

Hi,
Currently on a hiatus between Uni, not much to do. Anyways, I was working on repairing my ice machine when I came up with the same idea as I realised heat pumps have a higher COP than input by a considerable margin (if built correctly).
I've spent a while thinking about it, I'm going to attempt this myself too. I find it disheartening that most forums say this violates thermodynamics when in reality all you are doing is 'stealing' the heat from a source, although I agree it will be difficult to make sure it's efficent enough to get more useable energy than put in.

At first I thought it could be possible to do this with geothermal and get the water to boiling using a heat pump, then run a steam turbine, but from what I can tell their efficency drops as the gas temperature gets higher so I've settled on a stirling engine as their effiency is far higher than thermoelectric generators.

Practically there are a few considerations I've thought of:
A. Volume of air used: Air has a heat capacity of 1kj per kg per C. In order to pull 1000 watts thermal output you'd need to cool 1 cubic meter of air per second, in reality it may be 10C cooled as it passes over the evaporator (I can't find much literature on this at all, I'll have to do my own testing). Still, it will require a high flow rate in order to extract enough useable energy to beat the power required by the compressor and the losses in converting it into mechanical work.

B. Construction of the engine to ensure maximum efficency. Apparently 100% efficency is theoretically possible, but it's going to be 50% because no world is perfect.

I can't find a reason why it wouldn't work though.
1000 watt heat pump
4000 watts of thermal energy assuming COP of 4.0
50% stirling engine efficency
2000 watt to electrical energy.

Any model though would have much lower effiency simply due to the fact of losses. But still, I think it could be possible to beat the input by at least 10%.

Let me know what you guys think, but I'm pretty hyped. I'm going to spend the next few weeks learning more about the math and physics involved, and if it checks out. I will construct my own prototype :)
Any update on your attempts?
Fool
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Fool »

.

As I said before, efficiency for both engine and heat pumps are rated for specific temperatures. Higher temperature engines typically have higher efficiencies. Lower temperature heat pumps have higher efficiencies. Make sure you check the ratings on the engine and heat pumps to find out if there are a pair that will perform as you are hoping. The second law only suggests that it will be difficult to find a compatible pair. I don't think anyone has found or built a compatible pair.

Although several people have claimed to have done so, or with enough money they could maybe build one, look very carefully. Several have been mistaken or just plain frauds.

Good luck with your search.

.
Tom Booth
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Tom Booth »

Fool wrote: Tue Oct 01, 2024 8:28 am .

As I said before, efficiency for both engine and heat pumps are rated for specific temperatures. Higher temperature engines typically have higher efficiencies. ...
Only according to the obsolete, thoroughly disproven so-called "Carnot" limit equation nonsense.

Low temperature Stirling engines can be extremely efficient.

"Fools" opinions are worthless, as has been proven again and again, so pay no attention to him.
Fool
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Fool »

No. Go look at the advertised specifications. Test any after purchase.
Tom Booth
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Tom Booth »

Fool wrote: Thu Oct 03, 2024 11:10 pm No. Go look at the advertised specifications. Test any after purchase.
Specifications for what?

You said "Higher temperature engines typically have higher efficiencies". We are talking about Stirling engines, are we not?

Where do I find these "advertised specifications"? Or a Stirling engine anyone can purchase at all for that matter.

An AC or heat pump works more efficiently at a low ∆T.

My comment is in reference to Low Temperature, or low ∆T Stirling engines which IMO, and as I believe has been demonstrated by many of my own experiments already posted online are extremely efficient, near 100%

So by combining a heat pump and LTD type Stirling engine, both can operate at high efficiency.

We have an air conditioner in our window for cooling off the bedroom on hot summer nights.

Since it is a fact that an air conditioner works on the same principle as a heat pump, I've wondered; why not just turn the air conditioner around for heating the house in the winter instead of using an electric space heater? Blow the "waste heat" in the window instead of out.

After watching this video, I may just give it a try this winter:

https://youtu.be/hc_HcT4pIOE
Tom Booth
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Re: Stirling Engine & Heat Pump

Post by Tom Booth »

Another thing to consider;

In looking over various sources on how to calculate the COP of a heat pump, the text specifies for heating OR cooling.

Random Example: https://www.h2xengineering.com/blogs/he ... ey-matter/

A Stirling engine, however, benefits from a higher ∆T generally with both a hot side that can be increased in temperature by a heat pump and a cold side that can be reduced in temperature with the assistance of the self same heat pump.

So,...

When it comes to using a heat pump to provide a ∆T for running a Stirling engine, should we not then double the rated COP of the heat pump, since it MOVES heat from one side of the engine to cool it to a temperature below ambient while increasing the temperature of the hot side an equivalent amount?

So a heat pump with a COP of say 3.5 for heating OR 3.5 for cooling would have a combined effective COP of around 6.0 or possibly higher when both heating and cooling can be utilized.
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