Hot gas engine

4779421
Add to folder: View Folders  
Keywords to Highlight:

full-text

print

pdf

permalink

Inventors

Fellows, Oscar L.

Application #

084757

Filed

Aug-13-1987

Published

Oct-25-1988

Current US Class

060/517
060/525

International Classes

F02G 001/04

Field of Search

60/517 60/519 60/525

Examiners

Husar; Stephen F.

US Patent References

4290264   Stirling cycle appa...
4677825   Thermomotor

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Citation

Cite This Patent

More From Subclass 517

5345765   Stirling engines
4621497   Heat engine
6818818   Concentrating solar...
5715683   Heating and coolin...
4498298   Stirling cycle piston...
6810665   Stirling engine with...
5435136   Pulse tube heat en...
4495771   Stirling-cycle engine
4455826   Thermodynamic m...
5737924   Gas compressor ex...
6220030   Stirling engine bur...
7013640   Stirling engine ass...
 

More From Class 060

6651424   Catalyst systems
6460335   Actuator
4887429   Electro-thermal act...
4790284   Regenerative inter...
5863311   Particulate trap for...
4429624   Stirring arrangeme...
4433542   Heat-shielding stru...
4621497   Heat engine
4532763   Isochronous gas tur...
6009704   Exhaust gas recirc...
4591317   Dual pump controls
5634526   Hydrostatic transmi...
 
Abstract
A hot gas engine which uses elliptical members in place of gears or connecting rod linkages to couple the reciprocating pistons to the central shaft of the machine, thereby reducing friction and overall size of the machine, reducing weight to power ratios and increasing efficiency. The elliptical members are so designed as to provide two power strokes per revolution of the central shaft, and the piston and cylinder arrangement is such that they spiral around the body of the machine, allowing a very compact engine.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. A hot-gas engine of Stirling cycle class, the body, or core of the machine, comprised of two cylindrical housings, one within the other, which form the engine block and coolant jacket, at one end of which is a heater head, and at the other a sealed housing containing an electromagnetic-induction rotor; said rotor being affixed to a central shaft which is disposed along the central axis of the cylindrical housing, and which has, at its opposite end, a displacer-drive mechanism which causes the displacer piston to reciprocate within the heater head; and disposed radially about the circumference of the housings, and perpendicular to their axis, a plurality of cylinders, said cylinders housing an equal number of pistons, said cylinders so disposed that one end of each cylinder is fitted through the wall of the inner housing, and the other end fitted through the wall of the outer housing, so that the cylinders are arranged between the inner and outer housings, much like spokes in a wheel, the cylinders forming opposing pairs on several planes along the length of the housings, each plane comprised of two cylinders 180.degree. apart about the circumference of the housings, each plane rotated around the housing from the preceding plane, so that the opposing pairs of cylinders wind around the housing in a spiral arrangement; pistons which reciprocate within said cylinders, said pistons having rollers affixed to their bases which run in contact with elliptical members in the forms of plates with elliptical cutouts in their centers which are connected to the central shaft by means of a spider; said elliptical members being the means by which the motion of the pistons is related to, and dependent upon, the motion of the central shaft; said members and pistons so disposed that all pistons operate in unison, and reciprocate twice for each revolution of the central shaft, just as the displacer piston reciprocates twice with each revolution of the central shaft; said pistons facing inboard, toward the center of the housings, their base rollers, called cam followers, riding in contact against the inner surface of the ellipses, which revolve about the outside of the cylinder housings; a plurality of pumps disposed annularly about the central shaft, by which means lubricant and coolant are circulated, a third, outer housing, about the cylinder housings, which encompasses the elliptical plates and spider, and seals the engine gas-tight; and a stator winding, external to the engine housing and adjacent to the rotor housing, which provides means, in conjunction with the internal electromagnetic-induction rotor, to couple the engine to a load.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Stirling-cycle engines, sometimes called hot-air engines or hot-gas engines, are well known, as evidenced by more than 600 original and related patents, and are a genre of machines chiefly characterized by an operating process in which an internally contained quantity of gas is alternately and periodically heated and cooled, via conduction, through the walls of parts of the machine, by an external heat source and an external heat sink, in order to perform work.

These engines are attractive because of their high theoretical efficiency, their ability to utilize a large variety of fuels or energy sources, and their potential for reducing hydrocarbon emissions.

The chief difficulties inhibiting the commercial exploitation of these engines presently are that they must have high internal pressures in order to have a high specific output or efficiency or power-to-weight ratio; they must have high temperature, high pressure, dynamic seals to prevent escape of the working gas, and to separate machine lubricants from the working gas, because such mixing or contamination reduces the efficiency of the engines, and these requirements have heretofore resulted in unacceptable expense in the manufacture of these engines. Higher pressures usually result in heavier machines because the machine sections must be stronger in order to contain the internal forces, and as the engines increase in size in order to achieve higher horsepower, the weight and cost of these sections becomes impractical.
 
  In a hot gas engine of the type in which a number of working gas charges are separated from each other by an equal number of pistons each mounted slidably...  In a heater head for a hot gas engine the connection between the regenerator tops and the cylinder tops consists of pipes of equal shape and dimensions....