deltawhy
Electrical
- Jun 1, 2011
- 95
Hello,
I am an engineer currently in the design stage of a solar heat engine.
My question is two parts:
1. As I live in Canada, ambient temperatures fall pretty low during the winter months. Being that my background is electrical, I don't know much about stirling engines (carnot cycle). As the output of a stirling engine depends on the temperature differential, will it still work if t1 = -20 deg C, and t2 = +10 deg C?
2. Does anyone have any better ideas of converting heat to electrical energy (cheaply and quietly) other than external heat engines?
Thanks for your time,
Daniel
I am an engineer currently in the design stage of a solar heat engine.
My question is two parts:
1. As I live in Canada, ambient temperatures fall pretty low during the winter months. Being that my background is electrical, I don't know much about stirling engines (carnot cycle). As the output of a stirling engine depends on the temperature differential, will it still work if t1 = -20 deg C, and t2 = +10 deg C?
2. Does anyone have any better ideas of converting heat to electrical energy (cheaply and quietly) other than external heat engines?
Thanks for your time,
Daniel