0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
As CliffordK said steam engines and turbines. Also petrol and diesel engines use fuel to produce heat to do work.A thermocouple directly converts heat into electricity but not a lot.
How hot does this have to be?Think of an air conditioning unit that would actually generate electricity... [] Or, at least use an AC heat pump to limit the energy cost.If you could cheaply capture thermal energy down to about 0°C, you could likely have an end to global warming. In fact, there would be the risk of it being used to excess... and suddenly creating the next ice age.
Energy can be extracted from the flow of heat from a hot place to a colder place. Steam engines/turbines are one example of this.Seebeck-effect thermoelectric devices convert the heat flow directly into electricity, and for the past 50 years have generally been based on bismuth telluride technology (They're mostly made in Russia, although China has been getting in on the act recently). As with all heat-engines, the efficiency gets better the greater the thermal gradient - but for practical Seebeck devices and realistic/compatible temperatue differences) the efficiency is really rather poor (maybe 8% at most).It's not much use for "energy saving" devices, but can develop enough power to run remote telemetry devices off of hot pipes, or deep-space-probes containing a radioactive source (which keeps warm). I did hear of a scheme to use thermoelectric devices to harvest heat from the catalyser in a car to help power the car electrics. No idea whether it was ever going ot be commercially viable though.For more info see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermoelectric_effect
(...)Of course, you could always use a thermoelectric device to drive a heatpump to increase the thermal gradient to increase the efficiency of the thermoelectric device. What could possibly go wrong? []
Stirling motors seem to be the most efficient mechanical devices to convert heat into movement. ... Unfortunately, Stirling motors don't produce many HP.
(...)More correctly, Stirling engines have a relatively low power density when compared with more practical (and therefore common) heat engines.(...)
.... anyone care to prove me wrong? []
(...)IMO Stirling's will never overcome their low kW/Kg in any configuration (hybrid or whatever) to work on a road vehicle - even a large truck..... anyone care to prove me wrong? []
If you get stuck into that tool I told you about you prove youreself right [^]
No one can predict what the future will bring us, except if there is some theoretical demonstration that something can not be overrun, as light speed in vacuum, etc.
One of the apparent advantages of the Stirling cycle is its very high thermal efficiency. However, that is based on the assumption that the expansion and compressions processes are isothermal. I was looking at the Wiki page on the subject and it seems the expansion and contraction are a lot more adiabatic (isentropic) than the typical model portrays.