US3899888A - Oscillating piston apparatus - Google Patents

Oscillating piston apparatus Download PDF

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US3899888A
US3899888A US465138A US46513874A US3899888A US 3899888 A US3899888 A US 3899888A US 465138 A US465138 A US 465138A US 46513874 A US46513874 A US 46513874A US 3899888 A US3899888 A US 3899888A
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fluid
passageway
cylinder
chamber
piston
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US465138A
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Mark Schuman
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Priority to US05/713,841 priority patent/USRE30894E/en
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02GHOT GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT ENGINE PLANTS; USE OF WASTE HEAT OF COMBUSTION ENGINES; NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F02G1/00Hot gas positive-displacement engine plants
    • F02G1/04Hot gas positive-displacement engine plants of closed-cycle type
    • F02G1/043Hot gas positive-displacement engine plants of closed-cycle type the engine being operated by expansion and contraction of a mass of working gas which is heated and cooled in one of a plurality of constantly communicating expansible chambers, e.g. Stirling cycle type engines
    • F02G1/0435Hot gas positive-displacement engine plants of closed-cycle type the engine being operated by expansion and contraction of a mass of working gas which is heated and cooled in one of a plurality of constantly communicating expansible chambers, e.g. Stirling cycle type engines the engine being of the free piston type
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F01MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
    • F01BMACHINES OR ENGINES, IN GENERAL OR OF POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT TYPE, e.g. STEAM ENGINES
    • F01B11/00Reciprocating-piston machines or engines without rotary main shaft, e.g. of free-piston type
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02GHOT GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT ENGINE PLANTS; USE OF WASTE HEAT OF COMBUSTION ENGINES; NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F02G2270/00Constructional features
    • F02G2270/70Liquid pistons
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02GHOT GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT ENGINE PLANTS; USE OF WASTE HEAT OF COMBUSTION ENGINES; NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F02G2275/00Controls
    • F02G2275/40Controls for starting
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F05INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
    • F05CINDEXING SCHEME RELATING TO MATERIALS, MATERIAL PROPERTIES OR MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS FOR MACHINES, ENGINES OR PUMPS OTHER THAN NON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES OR ENGINES
    • F05C2225/00Synthetic polymers, e.g. plastics; Rubber
    • F05C2225/08Thermoplastics

Definitions

  • ihle fluid such as an, and a free piston for reciproca' tion within the cylinder, and a number of elongated [23 il Apt 29 1974 passageways each having an end opening into the cylinder and an opposite closed end
  • the passageways lzll Appl' 465'l38 are heated along their lengths.
  • the tin-shaped open Related 5 A fi fl Data end portions and the cylinder wall are cooled.
  • the apparatus herein relates to an oscillating piston and cylinder construction which may be used as a pump. such as is described in my U.S. Pat. No. 3.489.335, now reissued as U.S. Pat. No. Re. 27,740 or as a gas analyzer mechanism such as is disclosed in my U.S. Pat No. 3.516.745. or as part of an engine such as is described in US Pat. No. 3.583.l55. or other devices which utilize thermal energy for power.
  • the apparatus herein is a simplification ofand in some directions an improvement of the equipment described in the foregoing patents and applications.
  • the present invention provides more preferred forms of heat transfer surfaces for driving a moving part. e.g., a piston. whereby the heat transfer surfaces are in structures that are relatively efficient and compact. Means are also provided for eliminating some or all of the valves and other pieces of mechanism which were utilized in the abovementioncd equipment for restricting fluid flow into a heating chamber and for positioning the center or piston oscillation.
  • the invention herein contemplates forming a number of elongated passageways. each opening into a drive chamber near one face of a moving oscillating wall of the chamber. which may be formed by a piston face.
  • Each of the passageways is heated and the drive chamber is cooled whereby a temperature gradient exists between the drive chamber and the passageways.
  • a compressible fluid such as air. is forced by the piston face into and through the passageways. The fluid is heated in the passageways and is returned back to the drive chamber to drive the piston in one direction.
  • the piston compresses the fluid at its opposite face and the compression offluid in this opposite chamber of the cylinder in which the piston oscillates causes the piston to rebound or return. Fluid entering the drive chanber during the oscillation cycle is simultaneously cooled to assist in driving the piston in the other direction to thereby regularly repeat the cycle of piston and gas movement.
  • thermopneumatic energy is thereby provided to sustain the natural reso nance of oscillation of the piston between the gaseous compression springs at opposite faces of the piston. without the need for additional valving and other mechanical controls.
  • a sealing action of the piston against side walls of the cylinders separates the gaseous com pression springs and the mass of the piston decreases the resonant frequency to improve the efficiency and power of the device.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic. elevational. cross-sectional view of the oscillating piston apparatus
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken in the direction of arrows 22 of FIG. I;
  • FIG. 3 is a top plan view of the piston taken in the direction of arrows 3-3 of FIG. 1;
  • FIGS. 4-11. inclusive. show successive positions of the piston during one cycle
  • FIG. 12 is an elevational. schematic, crosssectional view of a modification
  • FIGs. l3l7 each illustrate schematic, sectional. views of different modifications.
  • FIG. I8 is a cross-sectional view of a novelty device utilizing the principles of the present invention.
  • the oscillating piston appara tus I0 is formed of a closed cylinder II containing a free piston I2.
  • the piston has an upper drive face I3 formed with integral. wedge-shaped tins 14.
  • the opposite piston face 15 forms a compression face.
  • Free piston 12 can be considered as having an integral form that has substantially the same cross sectional dimensions and working area throughout its length.
  • the piston I2 divides the cylinder into an upper, drive. cooling chamber portion 16 and a lower. compression chamber portion I7 which are normally separated from each other by a seal formed between the side walls of cylinder II and piston I2.
  • the upper and lower faces of piston 12 can be considered as moving walls of variable volume chambers having fixed walls defined by the upper and lower portions of cylinder 1 l.
  • the upper end or head 18 of the cylinder located above the upper chamber. is formed with a passageway means comprising a number of heated passageways 19. having closed upper ends and lower ends 20 which open into the upper chamber I6 with flared or outwardly wedgeshaped openings to provide greater surface area for cooling.
  • the lower ends 20 correspond in shape to the wedge-shaped fins 14 on the piston 12. to form mating variable geometry cooling passageways.
  • the upper drive face 13 of the piston may CI'OSS- be flat and the lower ends 20 of the passageways I) not' flared or wedge-shaped.
  • the passageway lower ends 20 variably exposed by the fins 14 of piston I2 serve as passageway means for cooling heated gas flowing into drive chamber I6.
  • the upper or closed ends of the passageways I9 are heated by means of a suitable. independent heating mechanism. such as heating tube 2] for carrying a heated lluid through exterior pipes 22 from a suitable external heater 23.
  • a suitable. independent heating mechanism such as heating tube 2] for carrying a heated lluid through exterior pipes 22 from a suitable external heater 23.
  • the heating mechanism may be varied and its specific construction forms no part ofthe invention herein
  • a lower heating tube Zla may also be included to supply heat some distance below the upper ends of the passageways.
  • the lower ends portions or open ends 20 of passageways I) are cooled by cooling tube 24. connected by exterior pipes 25 to an external cooling device 26.
  • Another cooling tube 2.4a. at the bottom of the flared ends 20. may also be include for better cooling.
  • a third cooling tube 24/ arranged in the cylinder wall, may be used to cool the cylinder wall surface in the re gion traversed and variably exposed by the upper drive face I3 of the piston.
  • the form of the cooling device is not part of the invention and may be varied.
  • the object here is to provide one or more heated passageways opening into a cooled chamber containing the piston face. such that the drive chamber has one or more vari ably exposed cooled passageways.
  • the cooled and heated passageways are formed of a heat conductive material so that there is a temperature variation between the heated passageways and the cooled drive chamber including the cooled passageway openings.
  • an insulating layer 27 is provided between the wall portions defining upper and lower parts of the passageways to reduce wasteful heat flow. More than one insulating layer may also be used. forming a somewhat laminated structure.
  • the fins and passageways may be arranged in other configurations, e.g.. the passageways and fins may be circular and arranged in concentric rings.
  • the passageways may. in the alternative, be outside of the cylinder and enter the drive chamber via a port in the side wall of the cylinder.
  • the upper chamber 16 is connected to the lower cylinder chamber 17, around the piston. by a shunt pipe 28 containing an upper, normally closed valve 29 and a lower. normally closed valve 30, in turn connected to a gas or air inlet 3].
  • Valves 29 and 30 are made of a conventional wager. ball, or similar type of pressure closing valve. of the type which is essentially sealed when closed. However. the valves are generally formed so that they do not tightly close at relatively low pressure differential but permit some leakage through them. Leakage through valves 29 and 30 decreases substantially to zero as the differential pressure across each valve increases.
  • valves 29 and 30 permit a small upward flow of gas around the piston.
  • some gas may leak through the valve to pipe 31.
  • valve 30 closes whereas gas may enter through valve 29. Due to the weight of the piston. there is a little less gas. and a little higher compression ratio. below the piston than above it. Thus, gas tends to flow upwardly around the piston. and is replaced by a net intake of gas through valve 30 and a net leakage through valve 29. If piston 12 drifts too low. the higher compression ratio below its lower face causes upward movement of the piston, whereby more gas is drawn through valve 30.
  • starter 32 including an external cylinder 33 connected by a pipe 34 into the lower chamber I7 of the main cylinder I].
  • a piston 35 connected to a piston rod 36, which is moved back and forth (left to right and vice versa as illustrated) by a suitable drive mechanism (not shown to draw gas through valve 30 into the cylinder 33 and to move gas from the cylinder 33 into the chamber I7 and vice versa to force the piston 12 to move up and down.
  • a suitable drive mechanism not shown to draw gas through valve 30 into the cylinder 33 and to move gas from the cylinder 33 into the chamber I7 and vice versa to force the piston 12 to move up and down.
  • the oscillation of piston 12 at a particular frequency is determined by a number of factors, including: the inertia or mass of piston 12 and the effect of pneumatic springs formed by the gases compressed by the upper and lower faces of piston 12 while the piston is oscillating.
  • the means for sustaining oscillation includes these factors and further includes: the thermal lag properties of the passageways means, i.e., the time or portion of an oscillating cycle of piston I2 for the maximum and minimum gas temperatures to occur after maximum and minimum compression of the gas in the chamber formed by the passageways and the upper face of piston 12'. the amount of heating of gas in passageways 19; the amount of gas cooling in drive chamber 16.
  • FIGS. 4-l I, inclusive, show successive steps in one cycle of movement of the piston 12.
  • the piston is shown in its bottom, dead center postion.
  • the gas below the piston in the compression chamber see arrows pushes the piston upwardly with greater force than is exerted against the upper face of the piston by the expanded. cooling gas in the drive chamber.
  • FIG. 5 shows the piston moving upwardly under the rebound of the compressed gas in the compression chamber and driving the still cooling gas upwardly into the passageways 19.
  • FIG. 6 shows the piston in the top dead center position, wherein the pressure of the gas below piston I2 is less than the pressure of the gas above the piston and the gas above the piston is being heated and beginning to return downwardly from the upper closed ends of the passageways 19.
  • FIG. 7 shows the gas. while still being heated in the passageways l9 expanding from the passageways into the upper. drive chamber to force piston 12 downwardly with the piston compressing the gas below it.
  • piston I2 is about one-quarter of the way down, compressing the gas below it to force the gas downwardly in response to the expanding gas above the piston.
  • the expanding gas above the piston 12 is simultaneously being cooled at the lower or outlet ends of passageways I9.
  • piston 12 is about one-half way down, and the force of the gas being compressed beneath the piston is increasing while the force of the gas above the piston is decreasing due to the increased volume of the drive chamber and the decreased volume in the lower chamber. as well as the cooling of the gas in the drive chamber.
  • FIG. I0 shows the piston about three-quarters of the way down with the pressure of the compressed gas below the piston now exceeding the pressure of the cooling gas above the piston so that the speed of the piston decreases.
  • FIG. 11 shows piston I2 at its bottom position again. with the compressed gas below the piston now pushing the piston upwardly against the decreased pressure of the cooling gas above the piston; at this time the pressure above piston 12 is considerably less than the pressure below the piston. Thereafter. the cycle repeats with the pistor. rapidly oscillating or reciprocating up and down during the repetition of each cycle.
  • FIG. 12 shows a modification wherein the cylinder head 18a is arranged to one side of the top of cylinder I la and opens into the top of cylinder through a nozzle like opening 40.
  • the piston 12a may have a smooth or flat top.
  • the fins may be omitted whenever significant power or amplitude of oscillation is not required.
  • the cylinder wall is cooled by cooling tube 241). The operation and construction is otherwise the same as that described above in connection with FIG. I.
  • the cylinder is clear for use as a variable volume optical chamber gas analyzer by providing the necessary transparent windows in the cylinder either above or below the piston as is described in my prior U.S. Pat. No. 3,516,745, of June 9, I970.
  • FIG. 13 shows a construction having a pair of side cylinder heads 18/), 181', each having heating tubes 2I and 2112. as described above.
  • the cylinder heads open through nozzle-like openings 41. into the cylinder llh, above and below the piston 12/).
  • the piston has upper and lower fins 42 which mesh with fixed cooling fins 43 having cooling pipes 24.
  • the piston I2 his positively driven in both directions so that the opposite faces of the piston can be considered as opposed moving walls ofa pair of chambers, which walls have a relative phase displacement of 180.
  • FIG. 13 also shows check valves 29 and 30 polarized to pass air through the chambers above and below piston 12b for positioning the center of piston oscillation.
  • Adjustable. spring biased, flow limiter valve 29a passes an adjustable amount of air to a load (not shown) only when the pressure in the upper cylinder chamber is greater than load pressure by a small amount determined by the position of spring 291'.
  • Check valve 29! keeps air from returning from the load.
  • Check valves 29a and 29h can control the pumping power supplied to a load so that piston [2/2 is not stalled.
  • FIG. 14 shows another modification wherein the cylinder head 18d. which has the same configuration as those shown in FIGS. I2 and 13, has a fluid flow path into the center of the cylinder 110 through nozzle-like opening 45.
  • the two pistons are synchronized to move in opposite directions at all times. That is. pistons [20 and 1211 are driven apart by the cooling gas located between them, and rebound towards each other by the gas which they compress at the opposite ends of the cylinder. Synchronizing oscillation of the two pistons in this manner can essentially eliminate vibration ofthe device. More than two pistons can also be synchronized in this manner.
  • an additional set of cooling fins in. and heated passageways opening into. each compression chamber can be added for additional power.
  • the facing faces of pistons [20 and 12d can thereby be considered as synchronized moving walls of a variable volume chamber.
  • the chamber walls move toward each other to compress gas fed into passageways of cylinder head 18:! and move away from each other to expand the chamber volume in response to heated gas being ejected from the passageways.
  • FIG. I5 illustrated a modification which is similar to that shown in FIG. 1 above. except that an additional piston 120 is added at the upper end and passageways I9 are not closed at one end.
  • the cylinder lid is elongated upwardly. as are the passageways I9.
  • and 210 are duplicated and a second insulating or thermal barrier 27a is provided.
  • the upper piston 120 is provided with fins as in FIG. I. to mesh with the flared upper ends of the passageways 19. The operation is the same as that described above in connection with FIG. 1, except for the driving of two pistons 1242a, instead on the one piston as illustrated in connection with FIG. I. Alternatively.
  • FIG. 16 illustrates an oscillating piston apparatus 50 including a cylinder which contains a single piston 12f. having lower face fins meshing with fixed cooling fins 5l.
  • Fins SI include cooling tubes 52 similar to those described above in connection with FIGS. I3 and 14.
  • head [8a which is the same as the heads described above in connection with FIGS. 12, I3 and I4, is offset to one side and opens into the cylinder on the side of the cooling fins SI opposite the piston 12f.
  • grooves 53 are formed in the center portion of the cylinder I I0. that is in the wall of the cylinder. Grooves 53 are by-pass passageways around a portion of the cylinder, which passageways have a fluid flow impedance that is substantially the same to fluid flow in both directions through the passageways. Thus, as the piston moves up and down, the leakage of gas, above and below the piston through the grooves 53, tend to maintain center of piston oscillation near the center of grooves 53.
  • FIG. 17 illustrates apparatus 60 which is identical to that described above in connection with FIG. 16, except that instead of the centering grooves.
  • Ushaped by-pass tubes 61 are formed in the wall of the cylinder for purposes of keeping the center of piston oscillation near or at the center or midpoint of the U-shpaed bypass tube 61.
  • the heated passageways may alternatively be connected to the drive chamber(s) via a port(s) in the cylinder side wall be tween the piston and the fixed cooling fins.
  • FIG. 18 wherein there is illustrated a novelty device or a physics demonstration device adapted to be powered by heat from a conve nient source.
  • a conve nient source such as a lamp of the incandescent type.
  • a pair of arcuate. heated passageways. 71 is located in a partially transparent housing 72 having a shaped adapted to mate with an incandescent light bulb globe (not shown).
  • the globe supports housing 72 with the aid of metal clip or holding strap 73 that is fixedly mounted on housing 72 and is adapted to be frictionally connected to the globe.
  • Heating of passageways 71 by heat from the lamp can be augmented by providing the housing 72 with radiation absorbing substances. e.g.. colored glass. It is to be understood that a single heated passageway may provide sufficient heating to operate the device.
  • Passageways 71. as well as passageways 19, are rcla' tively long and have considerable breadth. but are relatively narrow in width to provide optimum oscillation of gases therein. If housing 72 and passageways 71 are formed ofa relatively weak material, e.g., glass, spacing between walls of the passageways is preferably maintained by spacers 74, that are sufficiently small to have only a slight effect on fluid flow in the passageways.
  • each of passageways 71 is connected in fluid flow relationship to one end of hollow tube 75, that is downwardly depending from housing 72.
  • the other end of tube 75 is connected in fluid flow relationship with transparent cylinder 76 that contains free piston 77.
  • Cylinder 76 can be maintained securely in situ by spring clip 80 that is adapted to be secured to a suitable support. such as a lamp pole that carries the bulb for supporting housing 72.
  • Gas in cylinder 76 is cooled by air from the surrounding environment, without resort to cooling by cooling coils.
  • cylinder 76 includes a number of longitudinal grooves 78. centrally located on its interior side wall.
  • the lower end of cylinder 76 is in fluid flow relationship with starter 78 that includes a rubber or plastic bellows 78 having an upper interior wall bonded to the exterior. lower wall of cylinder 76.
  • Leaf springs XI catch the folds or lower end face of bellows 79 to maintain the bellows in a compressed state after the bellows has been con1- pressed by an operator.
  • Prior to compression ofthc bcl lows the lowcr face of piston 77 bciirs against the up permost fold ol'bcllows 79. In certain instances. it is dc sir-able to space the uppermost bellows lold from the lower edge of cylinder 76 to provide a leaky cylinder during starting. whereby air can get below the lower edge of cylinder 76 and establish a better rebound chamber.
  • the pneumatic power supplied by the heating and cooling means to the piston to sustain piston oscillation is approximately proportional to the amplitude or amount of temperature variation of the gas during the cycle and to the sine of the phase angle of thermal lag introduced primarily by the passageways, i.e.. the phase leg of the variation in the average temperature of gas in the chamber with respect to the instantaneous compression ratio.
  • the instantaneous compression ratio can be defined as the ratio of the maximum chamber volume to the instantaneous chamber volume.
  • the length and breadth of each passageway typically are each substantially greater than the passageway width. which may be substantially constant throughout the length and breadth of the passageways.
  • the passageway width is chosen according to the desired frequency of piston operation to be sufficiently narrow and uniform to heat or cool substantially all of the gas in the passageway sufficiently to provide an adequate amplitude of temperature variation. Heating is provided by passageways I9 and cooling by passageways between teeth 14 of piston 12 and by the cylinder wall portion traversed by the pis ton face.
  • the amplitude of the variation in average gas temperature during the cycle is determined by the amount of gas which is heated and cooled during the cycle and also by the amount of heating and cooling of this gas.
  • the passageways are preferably sufficiently narrow to allow heating or cooling of the gas emerging from the passageways throughout the substantially all of the CI'OSS section of the passageways. whereby there is heat ing or cooling of gas near the center of the passageways. as well as at the walls of the passageways.
  • the passageway width must. however. be wide enough to readily admit sufficient quantities of gas for heating or cooling of the gas in the passageways 19.
  • the passage way width must also be wide enough to provide an adequate angle of thermal lag such that gas is being heated and fed from the thermal lag heater to the piston as the piston is moving away from the heated passageway, and gas is being cooled in the thermal lag cooling chamber (drive chamber) as the piston moves toward the heated passageways. to maintain the piston in oscillation.
  • a compromise width is generally chosen at any given frequency of operation to maximize the product of the amplitude of the temperature variation and the sine of the thermal lag angle. so as to increase power and efficiency. Because ofthe thermal lag requirement. a heat exchanger of this invention typically has a passageway width greater than that of heat exchangers employed in Stirling cycle engines operating at the same frequency.
  • the breadth and length of a passageway are generally each made larger than the width in order to increase thc ⁇ olumc and decrease the lluid drag of the passage- .i I hereby.
  • thc amount of gas that can be heated or cooled by the passageway is incrcascd. with :1 minimum increase in surface arca and viscous drag.
  • the resulting passageway structure is relatively compact and pro vides good heating and cooling paths through the solid material forming the passageway walls. Ihcrcby c ⁇ tcr nal heating and cooling of the passageways is made more cllicicnt.
  • the passageways thus have a characteristic thermal time constant for heating or cooling fluid.
  • the time constant is primarily determined by the average width of the passageways, and secondarily by other factors such as length, and breadth, smoothness. properties of the fluid, and conditions of operation. These factors are chosen according to the desired frequency of operation to provide a thermal time constant which results in a sufficient phase angle of thermal lag at the oscillation frequency to sustain oscillation and to provide an adequate or optimum amplitude of oscillation.
  • the proportionality mentioned above for compression ratios less than 2:l may be less accurate for higher compression ratios but is nevertheless valuable as a guide for designing. at a given frequency of operation. an optimum thermal lag heating chamber and an optimum thermal lag cooling chamber.
  • the center of oscillation of all the pistons illustrated in all the embodi ments herein can be positioned either by check valves. similar to the techniques shown in FIGS. I and 13, or by passageway means bypassing a portion of the cylinder wall. as illustrated in FIGS. 16, I7 and 18.
  • the pistons could be positioned by means of three inlet check valves or by means of two by-pass passageways or grooves.
  • the check valve arrangement illustrated in FIG. 13 for pumping gas can be adapted to any of the embodiments illustrated herein. Pumping power can thus be drawn from any and all chambers of the devices illustrated by appropriately connecting the check valves to the chambers.
  • the passageways means can modify the thermal lag and the amount of heating of the gas by forming the passageway wall material to have a specific heat, thermal conductivity and geometrical configuration to provide a thermal time constant that causes cycling of the wall temperature at substantially the same frequency as the piston oscillates.
  • the device of FIG. 18 can be modified in numerous ways, such as providing an upwardly extending hollow tube to connect the heated passageways with the cylinder containing the free piston. It is also possible to elim inate clip 73 by forming the passageways in a pair of in terconnected sections, each adapted to fit on opposite sides of a lamp globe and dimensioned to be slighly smaller than the globe so as to be frictionally held on the globe with the aid of a fluid conduit connecting the two sections together.
  • the device described herein may also be used as a cooling device, e.g., for cooling a typical engine valve.
  • the valve head would contain the heated passageways and the cooled valve stem would contain the oscillating piston. Oscillation of the piston and a gas or fluid within the sealed valve would cool the valve head and valve seat by transferring heat to the valve stem and valve guide and thence to a water jacket or other conventional means for cooling a valve stem.
  • An oscillating piston apparatus comprising a cylinder. a free piston in the cylinder. said cyliner having a side wall with a port therein, a rebound chamber containing compressible fluid for reversing the motion of the piston. said rebound chamber having as a moving wall portion a face of the piston, means including said rebound chamber for sustaining oscillatory motion of the piston in the cylinder and means for controlling the location of the center of oscillation of the piston in the cylinder. said controlling means including said rebound chamber and a passageway communicating with the cylinder via the port. said passageway by-passing a portion. and only a portion of the axial length of the cylinder. said passageway having a fluid flow impedance which is substantially the same for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway. wherein said port. said by-passecl portion of the cylinder. and an unbypassed portion of the cylinder are all at least partially traversed by the piston.
  • the means for sustaining includes means for alternately heating and cooling the fluid.
  • the apparatus of claim 5 further including means for heating said heated passageway means.
  • said heated passageway means includes at least one passageway having a characteristic length and breadth which are each substantially greater than its characteristic width.
  • the apparatus of claim I further including another rebound chamber for reversing the motion of the piston. wherein the two rebound chambers are gaseous chambers acting as compression springs on opposite faces of the piston.
  • the apparatus of claim I further including a second port in the cylinder side wall. said passageway further communicating with the cylinder via said second port, wherein the two ports are located at different axial positions in the cylinder side wall, and the axial length of the by-passed cylinder portion is determined primarily by the axial separation and size of said ports.
  • controlling means comprises groove means in the cylinder wall in said by-passed portion of the cylinder.
  • An oscillating piston apparatus comprising two cylinders, a free piston in each cylinder, each of said cylinders having a side wall with a port therein.
  • said common chamber containing compressible fluid and having as moving wall portions one face of each piston, a separate rebound chamher for each piston.
  • said rebound chamber containing compressible fluid and having as a moving wall portion the opposite face of the piston.
  • each piston is located near the midpoint of the by-passed portion of its cylinder.
  • the means for sustaining includes means for synchronizing the oscillatory motion of the pistons.
  • the means for sustaining includes means for maintaining synchronous and opposite oscillatory motion of the pistons.
  • the apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for alternately heating and cooling the fluid.
  • the apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes heated passageway means for re peatedly heating the fluid in the common chamber.
  • each cylinder comprises groove means in the cylinder wall in said by-passed portion of the cylinder.
  • controlling means for each cylinder includes by-pass passageway means having no moving parts.
  • a naturally resonant oscillatory device comprising a chamber containing compressible fluid, said chamber having structure forming at least one peripheral wall portion susceptible to being oscillated at a nut ural resonant frequency of oscillation so as to cyclically decrease and increase the volume of the chamber, said chamber being substantially sealed during at least a substantial portion of the oscillation cycle, said chamber having fluid passageway means communicating with the at least one wall portion, means for heating said fluid passageway means, means for sustaining oscillatory motion of the at least one wall portion of the chamber so as to alternately decrease and increase the volume of the chamber, means including the oscillatory motion of the wall portion for repeatedly inducing a flow of cool fluid into said heated passageway means; said heated passageway means being designed in accordance with the frequency of oscillation to: (a) readily admit said cool fluid, (b) heat substantially all of said admitted fluid, (0) heat fluid in the passageway means as the oscillating wall portion moves in a direction to increase the volume of the chamber during said portion of the cycle, and (d) eject
  • said means for cooling said ejected fluid primarily comprises cooling of the ejected fluid by cool wall surfaces of the chamber external to said heated passageway means.
  • heating means includes means for heating said fluid passageway means substantially independently of the instantaneous phase of said at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion.
  • said at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion includes two periph eral wall portions oscillating substantially in synchronism so as to, substantially with the same phase, cyclically decrease and increase the volume of the chamber.
  • each of the wall portions is a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
  • the device of claim 33 further including groove means for each cylinder bypassing only a portion of the cylinder for positioning the center of oscillation of the free piston.
  • cooling of the ejected fluid primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber external to the heated passageway means.
  • the means for heating the passageway means includes means for heating the passageway means substantially independently of the instantaneous phases of the oscillating wall portions.
  • said heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having an average length substantially greater than its average width.
  • heating means includes means for heating said passageway means substantially independently of said natural resonant frequency of oscillation.
  • said passageway means comprises an elongated passageway having an average length and an average breadth each of which is substantially greater than the average width of the passageway.
  • the device of claim 29 wherein the means for sustaining oscillation includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool wall surfaces of the chamber proximate the oscillating portion.
  • the heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having a characteristic passageway width selected in accordance with the oscillatory frequency to augment said oscillation.
  • the heated passageway means includes a multiplicity of heated elongated passageways.
  • passageway means is formed to mate with an electric bulb which provides heat for heating the passageway means.
  • the device of claim 52 further including cylinder bypass means for positioning the center of oscillation of the free piston in the cylinder.
  • bypass means bypasses only a portion of the cylinder. said center of oscillation being positioned near the mid-point of the bypassed portion.
  • bypass means includes a bypass passageway bypassing said bypassed cylinder portion and having substantially equal fluid flow impedance in either direction through the passageway.
  • bypass means comprises groove means in the cylinder sidewall.
  • bypass means comprises means for forming the cylinder side wall to provide a lower impedance to fluid flow between the piston and cylinder side walls in the bypassed portion of the cylinder than in portions of the cylinder beyond the bypassed portion.
  • a naturally resonant oscillatory device comprising a variable volume chamber.
  • said chamber having structure forming at least one wall portion susceptible to being oscillated at a natural resonant frequency of oscillation so as to alternately decrease and increase the volume of the chamber.
  • said chamber maintained in a substantially closed condition during at least a portion of the oscillation cycle.
  • said chamber having fluid passageway means communicating with the at least one Wall portion. means for heating said fluid passageway means means for sustaining oscillatory motion of the at least one wall portion of the chamber so as to alternately decrease and increase said chamber volume.
  • said heated passageway means including the oscillatory motion of the wall portion for cyclically inducing a flow of cool fluid into said heated passageway means; said heated passageway means having a geometry and an average passageway width selected in accordance with the frequency of oscillation to readily admit said cool fluid and to heat by thermal transfer means substantially all of said admitted fluid so as to eject heated compressible fluid from the heated passageway means during said portion of the cycle as the oscillating wall portion moves in the same general direction as the ejected fluid and to heat fluid in the heated passageway means during said portion of the cycle as the oscillating wall portion moves in the same general direction as the ejectef fluid; said means for sustaining including: the heating of the fluid by said passageway means.
  • said cool fluid inducing means includes thermal transfer means for cooling said ejected fluid.
  • cooling means primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber external to the heated passageway means.
  • cooling means includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber cyclically varied in effective exposure to the fluid by the oscillating portion.
  • the cool fluid inducing means primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber proximate the oscillating portion.
  • the device otclaim 60 wherein the cool fluid inducing means includes means for cooling the induced fluid.
  • the at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion includes two periph eral wall portions oscillating substantially in synchronism so as to substantially together alternately decrease and increase said chamber volume.
  • each of the wall portions is a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
  • the heated passageway means is formed to be heated by an electric light bulb which provides sufficient heat energy for sustaining said oscillation while providing light for illumination of the surroundings.
  • the device of claim 72 further including groove means in the inside surface of the sidewall of each of said cylinders for controlling the center ofoscillation of each piston in its cylinder.
  • said heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having an average length and an :ueragc breadth each of which is substantially greater than the average width of til the passageway.
  • the heated passageway means includes a multiplicity of elongated heated passageways.
  • the device of claim 82 further including means bypassing only a portion of the cylinder to position the center of oscillation of the free piston within the by passed portion.
  • bypass means includes a bypass passageway bypassing said cylinder portion and having substantially equal impedance for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway.
  • bypass means comprises means for forming the cylinder sidewall to provide a greater mean separation between the piston and cylinder side walls in the bypassed cylinder portion than in a cylinder portion beyond the bypassed portion.
  • the device of claim 82 further including means bypassing only a portion of the cylinder to position the center of oscillation of the free piston near the bypassed portion.

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Abstract

A substantially closed cylinder containing a compressible fluid, such as air, and a free piston for reciprocation within the cylinder, and a number of elongated passageways, each having an end opening into the cylinder and an opposite closed end. The passageways are heated along their lengths. The fin-shaped open end portions and the cylinder wall are cooled. Piston reciprocation is effected by the force of heated expanding gas moving from the closed ends of the passageways to drive the piston in one direction as the gas cools in the region between the piston end and the cooled open ends of the passageways. The piston compresses the gas at the opposite piston face, which gas in turn drives the piston back after the force of the compressed gas exceeds the force of the cooling gas to regularly repeat such cycle.

Description

United States Patent Schuman l *Aug. 19, 1975 l l OSCILLATING PISTON APPARATUS Primary LAumirzcr-Williz1m L. Freeh [76] wanton Mark schuman ml G St SW Assistant Examiner-Gr P. LaPointe APL N0 516 Washington DC Armrney Agent, or Firm-Lowe King & Price 20024 [*1 Notice: The portion of the term ofthis patent l57l ABSTRACT Subsequent to Apr. 30 I99! has bean A substantially closed cylinder containing a compress- Caimed. ihle fluid such as an, and a free piston for reciproca' tion within the cylinder, and a number of elongated [23 il Apt 29 1974 passageways each having an end opening into the cylinder and an opposite closed end The passageways lzll Appl' 465'l38 are heated along their lengths. The tin-shaped open Related 5 A fi fl Data end portions and the cylinder wall are cooled. Piston [63] Continuation of Ser No. 227.514, Feb, [8. 1972. f is effected by force of heated Pat No. 1807904 which is u continuation-impart of pandmg gas f 9 h Clnsq encls of the set NO ]2| 37| March 97L uhundune sagewnys to drive the pIston in one direction as the gas cools in the region between the piston end and the [52] Us. CL H 60/5; 417/207; 60/520 cooled open ends of the passageways. The piston com 5 Int 1 H F03 7 0 presses the gas ill the opposite piston face. which gas 53 Fie|d f Search H 0 24 417 307 in turn drives the piston hack after the force of the compressed gas exceeds the force of the cooling gas to {56] References Cited regularly repeat such cycle.
UNITED STATES PATENTS 88 Claims. 18 Drawing Figures 3.807904 4/l974 Schumun 4. 417/207 OSCILLATING PISTON APPARATUS RELATIONSHIP TO CO-PENDING APPLICATION The present application is a continuation of my copending application. Ser. No. 227.514. filed Feb. 18. [972 for "Oscillating Piston Apparatus". now U.S. Pat. No. 3,807.904, granted Apr. 30. I974. which in turn is a continuation-in-part of application Scr. No. l2l.37 l filed Mar. 5. 197], now abandoned.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The apparatus herein relates to an oscillating piston and cylinder construction which may be used as a pump. such as is described in my U.S. Pat. No. 3.489.335, now reissued as U.S. Pat. No. Re. 27,740 or as a gas analyzer mechanism such as is disclosed in my U.S. Pat No. 3.516.745. or as part of an engine such as is described in US Pat. No. 3.583.l55. or other devices which utilize thermal energy for power. The apparatus herein is a simplification ofand in some directions an improvement of the equipment described in the foregoing patents and applications.
More specifically. the present invention provides more preferred forms of heat transfer surfaces for driving a moving part. e.g., a piston. whereby the heat transfer surfaces are in structures that are relatively efficient and compact. Means are also provided for eliminating some or all of the valves and other pieces of mechanism which were utilized in the abovementioncd equipment for restricting fluid flow into a heating chamber and for positioning the center or piston oscillation.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION Summarizing. the invention herein contemplates forming a number of elongated passageways. each opening into a drive chamber near one face of a moving oscillating wall of the chamber. which may be formed by a piston face. Each of the passageways is heated and the drive chamber is cooled whereby a temperature gradient exists between the drive chamber and the passageways. A compressible fluid. such as air. is forced by the piston face into and through the passageways. The fluid is heated in the passageways and is returned back to the drive chamber to drive the piston in one direction. Simultaneously, the piston compresses the fluid at its opposite face and the compression offluid in this opposite chamber of the cylinder in which the piston oscillates causes the piston to rebound or return. Fluid entering the drive chanber during the oscillation cycle is simultaneously cooled to assist in driving the piston in the other direction to thereby regularly repeat the cycle of piston and gas movement.
By using long passageways. heated near one end and cooled near their openings into the drive chamber for providing a difference in temperature between the passageways and the drive chamber. thermopneumatic energy is thereby provided to sustain the natural reso nance of oscillation of the piston between the gaseous compression springs at opposite faces of the piston. without the need for additional valving and other mechanical controls. A sealing action of the piston against side walls of the cylinders separates the gaseous com pression springs and the mass of the piston decreases the resonant frequency to improve the efficiency and power of the device.
These and other objects and advantages of this invention will become apparent upon reading the following description. of which the attached drawings form a part.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a schematic. elevational. cross-sectional view of the oscillating piston apparatus;
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken in the direction of arrows 22 of FIG. I;
FIG. 3 is a top plan view of the piston taken in the direction of arrows 3-3 of FIG. 1;
FIGS. 4-11. inclusive. show successive positions of the piston during one cycle;
FIG. 12 is an elevational. schematic, crosssectional view of a modification;
FIGs. l3l7 each illustrate schematic, sectional. views of different modifications; and
FIG. I8 is a cross-sectional view of a novelty device utilizing the principles of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS Referring to FIGS. I-3. the oscillating piston appara tus I0 is formed of a closed cylinder II containing a free piston I2. The piston has an upper drive face I3 formed with integral. wedge-shaped tins 14. The opposite piston face 15 forms a compression face. Free piston 12 can be considered as having an integral form that has substantially the same cross sectional dimensions and working area throughout its length.
The piston I2 divides the cylinder into an upper, drive. cooling chamber portion 16 and a lower. compression chamber portion I7 which are normally separated from each other by a seal formed between the side walls of cylinder II and piston I2. The upper and lower faces of piston 12 can be considered as moving walls of variable volume chambers having fixed walls defined by the upper and lower portions of cylinder 1 l.
The upper end or head 18 of the cylinder located above the upper chamber. is formed with a passageway means comprising a number of heated passageways 19. having closed upper ends and lower ends 20 which open into the upper chamber I6 with flared or outwardly wedgeshaped openings to provide greater surface area for cooling. The lower ends 20 correspond in shape to the wedge-shaped fins 14 on the piston 12. to form mating variable geometry cooling passageways. Alternatively. the upper drive face 13 of the piston may CI'OSS- be flat and the lower ends 20 of the passageways I) not' flared or wedge-shaped. The passageway lower ends 20 variably exposed by the fins 14 of piston I2 serve as passageway means for cooling heated gas flowing into drive chamber I6.
The upper or closed ends of the passageways I9 are heated by means of a suitable. independent heating mechanism. such as heating tube 2] for carrying a heated lluid through exterior pipes 22 from a suitable external heater 23. The heating mechanism may be varied and its specific construction forms no part ofthe invention herein A lower heating tube Zla may also be included to supply heat some distance below the upper ends of the passageways.
The lower ends portions or open ends 20 of passageways I) are cooled by cooling tube 24. connected by exterior pipes 25 to an external cooling device 26. Another cooling tube 2.4a. at the bottom of the flared ends 20. may also be include for better cooling. Also a third cooling tube 24/), arranged in the cylinder wall, may be used to cool the cylinder wall surface in the re gion traversed and variably exposed by the upper drive face I3 of the piston. The form of the cooling device is not part of the invention and may be varied. The object here is to provide one or more heated passageways opening into a cooled chamber containing the piston face. such that the drive chamber has one or more vari ably exposed cooled passageways. The cooled and heated passageways are formed of a heat conductive material so that there is a temperature variation between the heated passageways and the cooled drive chamber including the cooled passageway openings. Preferably an insulating layer 27 is provided between the wall portions defining upper and lower parts of the passageways to reduce wasteful heat flow. More than one insulating layer may also be used. forming a somewhat laminated structure. Instead of being straight and arranged in parallel. the fins and passageways may be arranged in other configurations, e.g.. the passageways and fins may be circular and arranged in concentric rings. The passageways may. in the alternative, be outside of the cylinder and enter the drive chamber via a port in the side wall of the cylinder.
The upper chamber 16 is connected to the lower cylinder chamber 17, around the piston. by a shunt pipe 28 containing an upper, normally closed valve 29 and a lower. normally closed valve 30, in turn connected to a gas or air inlet 3].
Valves 29 and 30 are made of a conventional wager. ball, or similar type of pressure closing valve. of the type which is essentially sealed when closed. However. the valves are generally formed so that they do not tightly close at relatively low pressure differential but permit some leakage through them. Leakage through valves 29 and 30 decreases substantially to zero as the differential pressure across each valve increases.
The valves 29 and 30 permit a small upward flow of gas around the piston. When the piston moves up. some gas may leak through the valve to pipe 31. When piston 12 is near the top of its stroke. a small amount of gas enters into the lower chamber I7 due to the valve opening. On the piston downstroke, valve 30 closes whereas gas may enter through valve 29. Due to the weight of the piston. there is a little less gas. and a little higher compression ratio. below the piston than above it. Thus, gas tends to flow upwardly around the piston. and is replaced by a net intake of gas through valve 30 and a net leakage through valve 29. If piston 12 drifts too low. the higher compression ratio below its lower face causes upward movement of the piston, whereby more gas is drawn through valve 30.
To start the reciprocation or oscillation of piston 12, a starting mechanism is necessary. This is schematically illustrated as starter 32. including an external cylinder 33 connected by a pipe 34 into the lower chamber I7 of the main cylinder I]. A piston 35 connected to a piston rod 36, which is moved back and forth (left to right and vice versa as illustrated) by a suitable drive mechanism (not shown to draw gas through valve 30 into the cylinder 33 and to move gas from the cylinder 33 into the chamber I7 and vice versa to force the piston 12 to move up and down. Once the piston 12 begins moving due to the full operation of the heating device 23 and cooling device 26. the starter is deactivated and positioned close to chamber I7. i e., at the extreme left.
as viewed in FIG. I. Usually a single cycle of the piston 35 is sufficient to initiate oscillation.
The oscillation of piston 12 at a particular frequency is determined by a number of factors, including: the inertia or mass of piston 12 and the effect of pneumatic springs formed by the gases compressed by the upper and lower faces of piston 12 while the piston is oscillating. The means for sustaining oscillation includes these factors and further includes: the thermal lag properties of the passageways means, i.e., the time or portion of an oscillating cycle of piston I2 for the maximum and minimum gas temperatures to occur after maximum and minimum compression of the gas in the chamber formed by the passageways and the upper face of piston 12'. the amount of heating of gas in passageways 19; the amount of gas cooling in drive chamber 16. It is to be noted that the net flow of cool fluid (fluid colder than the temperature of the hot walls of the passageways 19) that flows or is induced to flow into passageways 19, by the upper face of piston 12, while the piston is approaching the passageways, is primarily and directly responsive to pressure variations in this fluid. Further, the pressure variations in the fluid being compressed into passageways I9 is primarily and directly responsive to the changes in the volume of the chamber defined by the upper face of piston 12 and the passageways l9, which changes in volume are caused by the moving chamber wall comprised of the upper face of piston 12.
OPERATION FIGS. 4-l I, inclusive, show successive steps in one cycle of movement of the piston 12. Starting with FIG. 4, the piston is shown in its bottom, dead center postion. At bottom dead center, the gas below the piston in the compression chamber (see arrows pushes the piston upwardly with greater force than is exerted against the upper face of the piston by the expanded. cooling gas in the drive chamber.
FIG. 5 shows the piston moving upwardly under the rebound of the compressed gas in the compression chamber and driving the still cooling gas upwardly into the passageways 19.
FIG. 6 shows the piston in the top dead center position, wherein the pressure of the gas below piston I2 is less than the pressure of the gas above the piston and the gas above the piston is being heated and beginning to return downwardly from the upper closed ends of the passageways 19.
FIG. 7 shows the gas. while still being heated in the passageways l9 expanding from the passageways into the upper. drive chamber to force piston 12 downwardly with the piston compressing the gas below it.
In FIG. 8, piston I2 is about one-quarter of the way down, compressing the gas below it to force the gas downwardly in response to the expanding gas above the piston. The expanding gas above the piston 12 is simultaneously being cooled at the lower or outlet ends of passageways I9.
In FIG. 9, piston 12 is about one-half way down, and the force of the gas being compressed beneath the piston is increasing while the force of the gas above the piston is decreasing due to the increased volume of the drive chamber and the decreased volume in the lower chamber. as well as the cooling of the gas in the drive chamber.
FIG. I0 shows the piston about three-quarters of the way down with the pressure of the compressed gas below the piston now exceeding the pressure of the cooling gas above the piston so that the speed of the piston decreases.
FIG. 11 shows piston I2 at its bottom position again. with the compressed gas below the piston now pushing the piston upwardly against the decreased pressure of the cooling gas above the piston; at this time the pressure above piston 12 is considerably less than the pressure below the piston. Thereafter. the cycle repeats with the pistor. rapidly oscillating or reciprocating up and down during the repetition of each cycle.
MODIFICATION FIG. I2
FIG. 12 shows a modification wherein the cylinder head 18a is arranged to one side of the top of cylinder I la and opens into the top of cylinder through a nozzle like opening 40. The piston 12a may have a smooth or flat top. The fins may be omitted whenever significant power or amplitude of oscillation is not required. The cylinder wall is cooled by cooling tube 241). The operation and construction is otherwise the same as that described above in connection with FIG. I. By locating the passageways 19:: off to one side of the cylinder. at single set of passageways can be used to synchronously drive more than one piston (see FIG. 14, below). Also,
without the fins, the cylinder is clear for use as a variable volume optical chamber gas analyzer by providing the necessary transparent windows in the cylinder either above or below the piston as is described in my prior U.S. Pat. No. 3,516,745, of June 9, I970.
MODIFICATION FIG. I3
FIG. 13 shows a construction having a pair of side cylinder heads 18/), 181', each having heating tubes 2I and 2112. as described above. The cylinder heads open through nozzle-like openings 41. into the cylinder llh, above and below the piston 12/). The piston has upper and lower fins 42 which mesh with fixed cooling fins 43 having cooling pipes 24. Thus, the piston I2his positively driven in both directions so that the opposite faces of the piston can be considered as opposed moving walls ofa pair of chambers, which walls have a relative phase displacement of 180.
FIG. 13 also shows check valves 29 and 30 polarized to pass air through the chambers above and below piston 12b for positioning the center of piston oscillation. Adjustable. spring biased, flow limiter valve 29a passes an adjustable amount of air to a load (not shown) only when the pressure in the upper cylinder chamber is greater than load pressure by a small amount determined by the position of spring 291'. Check valve 29!) keeps air from returning from the load. Check valves 29a and 29h can control the pumping power supplied to a load so that piston [2/2 is not stalled.
MODIFICATION FIG. 14
FIG. 14 shows another modification wherein the cylinder head 18d. which has the same configuration as those shown in FIGS. I2 and 13, has a fluid flow path into the center of the cylinder 110 through nozzle-like opening 45. A pair of pistons 12c. 12d, each having fins 46 on their inner faces. mesh with spaced apart central cooling fins 4748, having integral cooling pipes 24d. The two pistons are synchronized to move in opposite directions at all times. That is. pistons [20 and 1211 are driven apart by the cooling gas located between them, and rebound towards each other by the gas which they compress at the opposite ends of the cylinder. Synchronizing oscillation of the two pistons in this manner can essentially eliminate vibration ofthe device. More than two pistons can also be synchronized in this manner. Also an additional set of cooling fins in. and heated passageways opening into. each compression chamber, can be added for additional power. The facing faces of pistons [20 and 12d can thereby be considered as synchronized moving walls of a variable volume chamber. The chamber walls move toward each other to compress gas fed into passageways of cylinder head 18:! and move away from each other to expand the chamber volume in response to heated gas being ejected from the passageways.
MODIFICATION FIG. I5
FIG. I5 illustrated a modification which is similar to that shown in FIG. 1 above. except that an additional piston 120 is added at the upper end and passageways I9 are not closed at one end. Thus, the cylinder lid is elongated upwardly. as are the passageways I9. The cooling tubes 24 and 24a and the heating tubes 2| and 210 are duplicated and a second insulating or thermal barrier 27a is provided. The upper piston 120 is provided with fins as in FIG. I. to mesh with the flared upper ends of the passageways 19. The operation is the same as that described above in connection with FIG. 1, except for the driving of two pistons 1242a, instead on the one piston as illustrated in connection with FIG. I. Alternatively. the stationary and moving fins may be omitted but the drive chamber walls would nevertheless be cooled. Gases flowing in the upper and lower portions of passageways I9 in response to oscillation of pistons I2 and I20 have a tendency to remain separate from each other even though there is no mechanical obstruction across the passageways.
MODIFICATION FIG. 16
FIG. 16 illustrates an oscillating piston apparatus 50 including a cylinder which contains a single piston 12f. having lower face fins meshing with fixed cooling fins 5l. Fins SI include cooling tubes 52 similar to those described above in connection with FIGS. I3 and 14. In FIG. 16, head [8a, which is the same as the heads described above in connection with FIGS. 12, I3 and I4, is offset to one side and opens into the cylinder on the side of the cooling fins SI opposite the piston 12f.
For purposes of positioning the piston 12f. without using valves, vertical grooves 53 are formed in the center portion of the cylinder I I0. that is in the wall of the cylinder. Grooves 53 are by-pass passageways around a portion of the cylinder, which passageways have a fluid flow impedance that is substantially the same to fluid flow in both directions through the passageways. Thus, as the piston moves up and down, the leakage of gas, above and below the piston through the grooves 53, tend to maintain center of piston oscillation near the center of grooves 53. If, for example, the center of piston oscillation drifts below the center of the grooves 53, more gas leaks downwardly around piston 12f through the grooves 53 while the piston is in the upper portion of its stroke, than leaks upwardly during the bottom portion of its stroke. There is, thereby, a net flow of gas downwardly to raise the center of piston oscillation upwardly.
MODIFICATION FIG. 17
FIG. 17 illustrates apparatus 60 which is identical to that described above in connection with FIG. 16, except that instead of the centering grooves. Ushaped by-pass tubes 61 are formed in the wall of the cylinder for purposes of keeping the center of piston oscillation near or at the center or midpoint of the U-shpaed bypass tube 61. In FIGS. 13. I4. 16 and I7 the heated passageways may alternatively be connected to the drive chamber(s) via a port(s) in the cylinder side wall be tween the piston and the fixed cooling fins.
MODIFICATION FIG. I8
Reference is now made ot FIG. 18 wherein there is illustrated a novelty device or a physics demonstration device adapted to be powered by heat from a conve nient source. such as a lamp of the incandescent type. A pair of arcuate. heated passageways. 71 is located in a partially transparent housing 72 having a shaped adapted to mate with an incandescent light bulb globe (not shown). The globe supports housing 72 with the aid of metal clip or holding strap 73 that is fixedly mounted on housing 72 and is adapted to be frictionally connected to the globe. Heating of passageways 71 by heat from the lamp can be augmented by providing the housing 72 with radiation absorbing substances. e.g.. colored glass. It is to be understood that a single heated passageway may provide sufficient heating to operate the device.
Passageways 71. as well as passageways 19, are rcla' tively long and have considerable breadth. but are relatively narrow in width to provide optimum oscillation of gases therein. If housing 72 and passageways 71 are formed ofa relatively weak material, e.g., glass, spacing between walls of the passageways is preferably maintained by spacers 74, that are sufficiently small to have only a slight effect on fluid flow in the passageways.
One end of each of passageways 71 is connected in fluid flow relationship to one end of hollow tube 75, that is downwardly depending from housing 72. The other end of tube 75 is connected in fluid flow relationship with transparent cylinder 76 that contains free piston 77. Cylinder 76 can be maintained securely in situ by spring clip 80 that is adapted to be secured to a suitable support. such as a lamp pole that carries the bulb for supporting housing 72. Gas in cylinder 76 is cooled by air from the surrounding environment, without resort to cooling by cooling coils. To center piston 77. cylinder 76 includes a number of longitudinal grooves 78. centrally located on its interior side wall.
To initiate oscillation of piston 77. the lower end of cylinder 76 is in fluid flow relationship with starter 78 that includes a rubber or plastic bellows 78 having an upper interior wall bonded to the exterior. lower wall of cylinder 76. Leaf springs XI catch the folds or lower end face of bellows 79 to maintain the bellows in a compressed state after the bellows has been con1- pressed by an operator. Prior to compression ofthc bcl lows the lowcr face of piston 77 bciirs against the up permost fold ol'bcllows 79. In certain instances. it is dc sir-able to space the uppermost bellows lold from the lower edge of cylinder 76 to provide a leaky cylinder during starting. whereby air can get below the lower edge of cylinder 76 and establish a better rebound chamber.
l tl
In each of the described embodiments, by using the ideal gas law it can be shown that for a given low compression ratio (less than 2:1 the pneumatic power supplied by the heating and cooling means to the piston to sustain piston oscillation is approximately proportional to the amplitude or amount of temperature variation of the gas during the cycle and to the sine of the phase angle of thermal lag introduced primarily by the passageways, i.e.. the phase leg of the variation in the average temperature of gas in the chamber with respect to the instantaneous compression ratio. The instantaneous compression ratio can be defined as the ratio of the maximum chamber volume to the instantaneous chamber volume. As illustrated, the length and breadth of each passageway typically are each substantially greater than the passageway width. which may be substantially constant throughout the length and breadth of the passageways. The passageway width is chosen according to the desired frequency of piston operation to be sufficiently narrow and uniform to heat or cool substantially all of the gas in the passageway sufficiently to provide an adequate amplitude of temperature variation. Heating is provided by passageways I9 and cooling by passageways between teeth 14 of piston 12 and by the cylinder wall portion traversed by the pis ton face.
The amplitude of the variation in average gas temperature during the cycle is determined by the amount of gas which is heated and cooled during the cycle and also by the amount of heating and cooling of this gas.
The passageways are preferably sufficiently narrow to allow heating or cooling of the gas emerging from the passageways throughout the substantially all of the CI'OSS section of the passageways. whereby there is heat ing or cooling of gas near the center of the passageways. as well as at the walls of the passageways. The passageway width must. however. be wide enough to readily admit sufficient quantities of gas for heating or cooling of the gas in the passageways 19. The passage way width must also be wide enough to provide an adequate angle of thermal lag such that gas is being heated and fed from the thermal lag heater to the piston as the piston is moving away from the heated passageway, and gas is being cooled in the thermal lag cooling chamber (drive chamber) as the piston moves toward the heated passageways. to maintain the piston in oscillation. Thus. a compromise width is generally chosen at any given frequency of operation to maximize the product of the amplitude of the temperature variation and the sine of the thermal lag angle. so as to increase power and efficiency. Because ofthe thermal lag requirement. a heat exchanger of this invention typically has a passageway width greater than that of heat exchangers employed in Stirling cycle engines operating at the same frequency.
The breadth and length ofa passageway are generally each made larger than the width in order to increase thc \olumc and decrease the lluid drag of the passage- .i I hereby. thc amount of gas that can be heated or cooled by the passageway is incrcascd. with :1 minimum increase in surface arca and viscous drag. The resulting passageway structure is relatively compact and pro vides good heating and cooling paths through the solid material forming the passageway walls. Ihcrcby c\tcr nal heating and cooling of the passageways is made more cllicicnt.
The passageways thus have a characteristic thermal time constant for heating or cooling fluid. The time constant is primarily determined by the average width of the passageways, and secondarily by other factors such as length, and breadth, smoothness. properties of the fluid, and conditions of operation. These factors are chosen according to the desired frequency of operation to provide a thermal time constant which results in a sufficient phase angle of thermal lag at the oscillation frequency to sustain oscillation and to provide an adequate or optimum amplitude of oscillation. The proportionality mentioned above for compression ratios less than 2:l may be less accurate for higher compression ratios but is nevertheless valuable as a guide for designing. at a given frequency of operation. an optimum thermal lag heating chamber and an optimum thermal lag cooling chamber.
Because of the thermal lag requirement. it is desired that heating of gas predominate over cooling for a period of time after maximum compression. Correspondingly. it is desired that the net cooling of gas near minimum compression continue for a period of time after minimum compression.
It should be understood that almost any compressible fluid. such as a liquid and its vapor. may be used as the working fluid of this device. However. the thermal lag device of this invention. by itself. is not expected to be as efficient an energy converter as some existing heat engines.
It should also be understood that the center of oscillation of all the pistons illustrated in all the embodi ments herein can be positioned either by check valves. similar to the techniques shown in FIGS. I and 13, or by passageway means bypassing a portion of the cylinder wall. as illustrated in FIGS. 16, I7 and 18. For example, in each of FIGS. I4 and 15, the pistons could be positioned by means of three inlet check valves or by means of two by-pass passageways or grooves. In addition. the check valve arrangement illustrated in FIG. 13 for pumping gas can be adapted to any of the embodiments illustrated herein. Pumping power can thus be drawn from any and all chambers of the devices illustrated by appropriately connecting the check valves to the chambers.
While there have been described and illustrated several specific embodiments of the invention, it will be clear that variations in the details of the embodiments specifically illustrated and described may be made without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims. For example. the passageways means can modify the thermal lag and the amount of heating of the gas by forming the passageway wall material to have a specific heat, thermal conductivity and geometrical configuration to provide a thermal time constant that causes cycling of the wall temperature at substantially the same frequency as the piston oscillates.
The device of FIG. 18 can be modified in numerous ways, such as providing an upwardly extending hollow tube to connect the heated passageways with the cylinder containing the free piston. It is also possible to elim inate clip 73 by forming the passageways in a pair of in terconnected sections, each adapted to fit on opposite sides of a lamp globe and dimensioned to be slighly smaller than the globe so as to be frictionally held on the globe with the aid of a fluid conduit connecting the two sections together.
The device described herein may also be used as a cooling device, e.g., for cooling a typical engine valve. Thus. the valve head would contain the heated passageways and the cooled valve stem would contain the oscillating piston. Oscillation of the piston and a gas or fluid within the sealed valve would cool the valve head and valve seat by transferring heat to the valve stem and valve guide and thence to a water jacket or other conventional means for cooling a valve stem.
What is claimed is:
I. An oscillating piston apparatus comprising a cylinder. a free piston in the cylinder. said cyliner having a side wall with a port therein, a rebound chamber containing compressible fluid for reversing the motion of the piston. said rebound chamber having as a moving wall portion a face of the piston, means including said rebound chamber for sustaining oscillatory motion of the piston in the cylinder and means for controlling the location of the center of oscillation of the piston in the cylinder. said controlling means including said rebound chamber and a passageway communicating with the cylinder via the port. said passageway by-passing a portion. and only a portion of the axial length of the cylinder. said passageway having a fluid flow impedance which is substantially the same for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway. wherein said port. said by-passecl portion of the cylinder. and an unbypassed portion of the cylinder are all at least partially traversed by the piston.
2. The apparatus of claim I wherein the free piston is of substantially integral construction.
3. The apparatus of claim I wherein the crosssectional dimensions of the free piston are substantially the same throughout substantially all of its length.
4. The apparatus of claim wherein the means for sustaining includes means for alternately heating and cooling the fluid.
5. The apparatus of claim I wherein the means for sustaining includes heated passageway means communicating with said cylinder.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 further including means for heating said heated passageway means.
7. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said heated passageway means includes at least one passageway having a characteristic length and breadth which are each substantially greater than its characteristic width.
8. The apparatus of claim I further including another rebound chamber for reversing the motion of the piston. wherein the two rebound chambers are gaseous chambers acting as compression springs on opposite faces of the piston.
9. The apparatus of claim I further including a second port in the cylinder side wall. said passageway further communicating with the cylinder via said second port, wherein the two ports are located at different axial positions in the cylinder side wall, and the axial length of the by-passed cylinder portion is determined primarily by the axial separation and size of said ports.
Ill. The apparatus ofclaim I wherein the axial length of said by-passcd cylinder portion is less than the axial length of the piston side wall.
ll. The apparatus of claim I wherein the passageway is of integral construction.
I2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said controlling means comprises groove means in the cylinder wall in said by-passed portion of the cylinder.
13. The apparatus of claim I wherein said passageway has no moving parts.
14. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the controlling means has no moving parts.
15. The apparatus of claim I wherein the sustaining means has no moving parts other than the piston itself.
16. The apparatus of claim I wherein the controlling means is of integral construction.
17. An oscillating piston apparatus comprising two cylinders, a free piston in each cylinder, each of said cylinders having a side wall with a port therein. means for sustaining oscillatory motion of each piston in its cylinder, and means for controlling the locations of the centers of oscillation of the pistons in their cylinders, said controlling means including: a common chamber for the two cylinders. said common chamber containing compressible fluid and having as moving wall portions one face of each piston, a separate rebound chamher for each piston. said rebound chamber containing compressible fluid and having as a moving wall portion the opposite face of the piston. and a fluid passageway for each cylinder communicating with the respective cylinder via the respective port, said passageway bypassing a portion, and only a portion, of the axial length of the cylinder, said passageway having a fluid flow impedance which is substantially the same for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway; whereby the center of oscillation of each piston is located near the midpoint of the by-passed portion of its cylinder.
18. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for synchronizing the oscillatory motion of the pistons.
19. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for maintaining synchronous and opposite oscillatory motion of the pistons.
20. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for alternately heating and cooling the fluid.
21. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes heated passageway means for re peatedly heating the fluid in the common chamber.
22. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the passageway for each cylinder consists of a passageway in said portion of the cylinder wall.
23. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein said controlling means i'or each cylinder comprises groove means in the cylinder wall in said by-passed portion of the cylinder.
24. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein said controlling means for each cylinder includes by-pass passageway means having no moving parts.
25. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the free pistons are each of substantially integral construction.
26. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the crosssectional dimensions of each piston are substantially the same throughout substantially all of the piston length.
27. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the axial length of said by-passed cylinder portion is less than the axial length of the piston side wall.
28. The apparatus otclaim [7 wherein the sustaining means has no moving parts other than the two free pistons.
29. A naturally resonant oscillatory device comprising a chamber containing compressible fluid, said chamber having structure forming at least one peripheral wall portion susceptible to being oscillated at a nut ural resonant frequency of oscillation so as to cyclically decrease and increase the volume of the chamber, said chamber being substantially sealed during at least a substantial portion of the oscillation cycle, said chamber having fluid passageway means communicating with the at least one wall portion, means for heating said fluid passageway means, means for sustaining oscillatory motion of the at least one wall portion of the chamber so as to alternately decrease and increase the volume of the chamber, means including the oscillatory motion of the wall portion for repeatedly inducing a flow of cool fluid into said heated passageway means; said heated passageway means being designed in accordance with the frequency of oscillation to: (a) readily admit said cool fluid, (b) heat substantially all of said admitted fluid, (0) heat fluid in the passageway means as the oscillating wall portion moves in a direction to increase the volume of the chamber during said portion of the cycle, and (d) eject heated compressible fluid from the passageway means into a region of the chamber external to the passageway means as the oscillating wall portion moves in a direction to increase the volume of the chamber during said portion of the cycle; said cool fluid flow inducing means further including means for cooling fluid ejected from said heated passageway means, said means for sustaining including: (a) the heated fluid passageway means, (b) the flow inducing means including the motion of said wall portion and the means for cooling ejected fluid, (c) inertia of the structure. and (d) spring action of fluid compressed by the oscillating wall portion; wherein the energy for sustaining said oscillation is derived primarily from said heating and said cooling; wherein a net flow of fluid is induced into the heated passageway means while the volume of the chamber is decreasing during said portion of the cycle, said net flow being primarily and directly responsive to pressure variations of the fluid in the chamber resulting primarily and directly from changes in the chamber volume caused by the oscillating portion.
30. The device of claim 29 wherein said means for cooling said ejected fluid primarily comprises cooling of the ejected fluid by cool wall surfaces of the chamber external to said heated passageway means.
3]. The device of claim 29 wherein said heating means includes means for heating said fluid passageway means substantially independently of the instantaneous phase of said at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion.
32. The device of claim 29 wherein said at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion includes two periph eral wall portions oscillating substantially in synchronism so as to, substantially with the same phase, cyclically decrease and increase the volume of the chamber.
33. The device of claim 32 wherein each of the wall portions is a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
34. The device of claim 33 further including groove means for each cylinder bypassing only a portion of the cylinder for positioning the center of oscillation of the free piston.
35. The device of claim 32 wherein said cooling of the ejected fluid primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber external to the heated passageway means.
36. The device of claim 35 wherein said cool walls primarily include walls of the chamber proximate the oscillating portions and the faces of the oscillating portions.
37. The device of claim 32 wherein the means for heating the passageway means includes means for heating the passageway means substantially independently of the instantaneous phases of the oscillating wall portions.
38. The device of claim 32 wherein said wall portions communicate oth with each other and with said heated passageway means via a fluid flow connecting means, wherein said means for sustaining oscillation includes cooling of said ejected fluid by cool walls of the connecting means proximate the oscillating portions.
39. The device of claim 29 wherein said heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having an average length substantially greater than its average width.
40. The device of claim 29 wherein said chamber is substantially sealed during substantially all of the oscillatory cycle.
41. The device of claim 29 wherein said heating means includes means for heating said passageway means substantially independently of said natural resonant frequency of oscillation.
42. The device of claim 29 wherein said passageway means comprises an elongated passageway having an average length and an average breadth each of which is substantially greater than the average width of the passageway.
43. The device of claim 29 wherein there is an increase in effective exposure of a cool surface to fluid in the chamber as the wall portion moves in a direction to increase the chamber volume. whereby said means for cooling the ejected fluid includes cooling of the ejected fluid by said variably exposed cool surface.
44. The device of claim 29 wherein said heating of fluid in said passageway means and said cooling of ejected fluid each primarily comprises thermal transfer between the fluid and walls of the chamber.
45. The device of claim 29 wherein the means for sustaining oscillation includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool wall surfaces of the chamber proximate the oscillating portion.
46. The device of claim 45 wherein said cool wall surfaces include an exposed face of the oscillating portion.
47. The device of claim 29 wherein the heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having a characteristic passageway width selected in accordance with the oscillatory frequency to augment said oscillation.
48. The device of claim 29 wherein the heated passageway means includes a multiplicity of heated elongated passageways.
49. The device of claim 29 wherein the passageway means is formed to mate with an electric bulb which provides heat for heating the passageway means.
50. The device of claim 29 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said heated passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place primarily while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
5]. The device of claim 29 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said heated passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place substantially entirely while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
S2. The device of claim 29 wherein said wall portion comprises a free piston oscillating in the cylinder.
53. The device of claim 52 further including cylinder bypass means for positioning the center of oscillation of the free piston in the cylinder.
54. The device of claim 53 wherein said bypass means bypasses only a portion of the cylinder. said center of oscillation being positioned near the mid-point of the bypassed portion.
55. The device of claim 54 wherein the bypass means includes a bypass passageway bypassing said bypassed cylinder portion and having substantially equal fluid flow impedance in either direction through the passageway.
S6. The device of claim 55 wherein said passageway is of integral construction.
57. The device of claim 55 wherein said passageway is integral with the cylinder.
58. The device of claim 55 wherein said bypass means comprises groove means in the cylinder sidewall.
59. The device of claim 55 wherein said bypass means comprises means for forming the cylinder side wall to provide a lower impedance to fluid flow between the piston and cylinder side walls in the bypassed portion of the cylinder than in portions of the cylinder beyond the bypassed portion.
60. A naturally resonant oscillatory device comprising a variable volume chamber. said chamber having structure forming at least one wall portion susceptible to being oscillated at a natural resonant frequency of oscillation so as to alternately decrease and increase the volume of the chamber. said chamber maintained in a substantially closed condition during at least a portion of the oscillation cycle. said chamber having fluid passageway means communicating with the at least one Wall portion. means for heating said fluid passageway means means for sustaining oscillatory motion of the at least one wall portion of the chamber so as to alternately decrease and increase said chamber volume. means including the oscillatory motion of the wall portion for cyclically inducing a flow of cool fluid into said heated passageway means; said heated passageway means having a geometry and an average passageway width selected in accordance with the frequency of oscillation to readily admit said cool fluid and to heat by thermal transfer means substantially all of said admitted fluid so as to eject heated compressible fluid from the heated passageway means during said portion of the cycle as the oscillating wall portion moves in the same general direction as the ejected fluid and to heat fluid in the heated passageway means during said portion of the cycle as the oscillating wall portion moves in the same general direction as the ejectef fluid; said means for sustaining including: the heating of the fluid by said passageway means. the means for heating said passageway means, said flow inducing means, inertia of the structure and spring action of fluid compressed by the oscillating wall portion; wherein a net flow of fluid is induced into the heated passageway means while the fluid is being compressed toward the heated passage way means by the oscillating portion during said portion of the cycle, said net flow being primarily and directly responsive to pressure variations of the fluid in the chamber resulting primarily and directly from changes in the chamber volume caused by the oscillating portion.
61. The device of claim 60 wherein said cool fluid inducing means includes thermal transfer means for cooling said ejected fluid.
62. The device of claim 6| wherein said cooling means primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber external to the heated passageway means.
63. The device of claim 6] wherein said cooling means includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber cyclically varied in effective exposure to the fluid by the oscillating portion.
64. The device of claim 61 wherein said cooling provides the primary cooling for sustaining said oscillation.
65. The device of claim 60 wherein the cool fluid inducing means primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber proximate the oscillating portion.
66. The device otclaim 60 wherein the cool fluid inducing means includes means for cooling the induced fluid.
67. The device of claim 66 wherein the energy for sustaining said oscillation is derived primarily from said heating and said cooling.
68. The device of claim 60 wherein the heat energy for sustaining said oscillation is provided primarily by said heating.
6). The device of claim 60 wherein said fluid passageway means is heated substantially independently of the instantaneous phase of the oscillating portion.
70. The device of claim 69 wherein the at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion includes two periph eral wall portions oscillating substantially in synchronism so as to substantially together alternately decrease and increase said chamber volume.
71. The device of claim 70 wherein each of the wall portions is a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
72. The device of claim 7l wherein the heated passageway means is formed to be heated by an electric light bulb which provides sufficient heat energy for sustaining said oscillation while providing light for illumination of the surroundings.
73. The device of claim 72 further including groove means in the inside surface of the sidewall of each of said cylinders for controlling the center ofoscillation of each piston in its cylinder.
74. The device of claim 70 wherein said wall portions communicate both with each other and with said heated passageway means via a fluid connecting means. and wherein said means for sustaining oscillation in eludes cooling of said induced fluid by cool walls of the connecting means proximate the oscillating portions.
75. The device of claim 69 wherein said heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having an average length and an :ueragc breadth each of which is substantially greater than the average width of til the passageway.
76. The device of claim 69 wherein said chamber is substantially sealed during substantially all of the oscillatory cycle.
77. The device of claim 69 wherein the heated passageway means includes a multiplicity of elongated heated passageways.
78. The device of claim 69 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place substantially en tirely while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
79. The device of claim wherein said passageway means is heated substantially independently of said natural resonant frequency of oscillation.
80. The device of claim 50 wherein said ejected heated fluid is derived primarily from cool fluid induced into said heated passageway means while said chamber volume decreases during said portion of the cycle.
8|. The device of claim 60 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place primarily while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
82. The device of claim 60 wherein the wall portion comprises a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
83. The device of claim 82 further including means bypassing only a portion of the cylinder to position the center of oscillation of the free piston within the by passed portion.
84. The device of claim 83 wherein the bypass means includes a bypass passageway bypassing said cylinder portion and having substantially equal impedance for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway.
85. The device of claim 83 wherein said bypass means comprises means for forming the cylinder sidewall to provide a greater mean separation between the piston and cylinder side walls in the bypassed cylinder portion than in a cylinder portion beyond the bypassed portion.
86. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said passageway and said port comprise an enlargement of the inside diameter of the cylinder in a region of the cylinder side-wall within said bypassed portion.
87. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein said passageway and said port for each cylinder comprise an enlargement of the inside diameter of the cylinder in a region of the cylinder side-wall within said bypassed portion.
88. The device of claim 82 further including means bypassing only a portion of the cylinder to position the center of oscillation of the free piston near the bypassed portion.
i l r

Claims (88)

1. An oscillating piston apparatus comprising a cylinder, a free piston in the cylinder, said cyliner having a side wall with a port therein, a rebound chamber containing compressible fluid for reversing the motion of the piston. said rebound chamber having as a moving wall portion a face of the piston, means including said rebound chamber for sustaining oscillatory motion of the piston in the cylinder and means for controlling the location of the center of oscillation of the piston in the cylinder, said controlling means including said rebound chamber and a passageway communicating with the cylinder via the port, said passageway bypassing a portion, and only a portion of the axial length of the cylinder, said passageway having a fluid flow impedance which is substantially the same for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway, wherein said port, said by-passed portion of the cylinder, and an unbypassed portion of the cylinder are all at least partially traversed by the piston.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the free piston is of substantially integral construction.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the cross-sectional dimensions of the free piston are substantially the same throughout substantially all of its length.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for alternately heating and cooling the fluid.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the means for sustaining includes heated passageway means communicating with said cylinder.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 further including means for heating said heated passageway means.
7. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said heated passageway means includes at least one passageway having a characteristic length and breadth which are each substantially greater than its characteristic width.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 further including another rebound chamber for reversing the motion of the piston, wherein the two rebound chambers are gaseous chambers acting as compression springs on opposite faces of the piston.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 further including a second port in the cylinder side wall, said passageway further communicating with the cylinder via said second port, wherein the two ports are located at different axial positions in the cylinder side wall, and the axial length of the by-passed cylinder portion is determined primarily by the axial separation and size of said ports.
10. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the axial length of said by-passed cylinder portion is less than the axial length of the piston side wall.
11. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the passageway is of integral construction.
12. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said controlling means comprises groove means in the cylinder wall in said by-passed portion of the cylinder.
13. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said passageway has no moving parts.
14. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the controlling means has no moving parts.
15. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the sustaining means has no moving parts other than the piston itself.
16. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the controlling means is of integral construction.
17. An oscillating piston apparatus comprising two cylinders, a free piston in each cylinder, each of said cylinders having a side wall with a port therein, means for sustaining oscillatory motion of each piston in its cylinder, and means for controlling the locations of the centers of oscillation of the pistons in their cylinders, said controlling means including: a common chamber for the two cylinders, said common chamber containing compressible fluid and having as moving wall portions one face of each piston, a separate rebound chamber for each piston, said rebound chamber containing compressible fluid and having as a moviNg wall portion the opposite face of the piston, and a fluid passageway for each cylinder communicating with the respective cylinder via the respective port, said passageway by-passing a portion, and only a portion, of the axial length of the cylinder, said passageway having a fluid flow impedance which is substantially the same for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway; whereby the center of oscillation of each piston is located near the mid-point of the by-passed portion of its cylinder.
18. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for synchronizing the oscillatory motion of the pistons.
19. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for maintaining synchronous and opposite oscillatory motion of the pistons.
20. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes means for alternately heating and cooling the fluid.
21. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the means for sustaining includes heated passageway means for repeatedly heating the fluid in the common chamber.
22. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the passageway for each cylinder consists of a passageway in said portion of the cylinder wall.
23. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein said controlling means for each cylinder comprises groove means in the cylinder wall in said by-passed portion of the cylinder.
24. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein said controlling means for each cylinder includes by-pass passageway means having no moving parts.
25. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the free pistons are each of substantially integral construction.
26. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the cross-sectional dimensions of each piston are substantially the same throughout substantially all of the piston length.
27. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the axial length of said by-passed cylinder portion is less than the axial length of the piston side wall.
28. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the sustaining means has no moving parts other than the two free pistons.
29. A naturally resonant oscillatory device comprising a chamber containing compressible fluid, said chamber having structure forming at least one peripheral wall portion susceptible to being oscillated at a natural resonant frequency of oscillation so as to cyclically decrease and increase the volume of the chamber, said chamber being substantially sealed during at least a substantial portion of the oscillation cycle, said chamber having fluid passageway means communicating with the at least one wall portion, means for heating said fluid passageway means, means for sustaining oscillatory motion of the at least one wall portion of the chamber so as to alternately decrease and increase the volume of the chamber, means including the oscillatory motion of the wall portion for repeatedly inducing a flow of cool fluid into said heated passageway means; said heated passageway means being designed in accordance with the frequency of oscillation to: (a) readily admit said cool fluid, (b) heat substantially all of said admitted fluid, (c) heat fluid in the passageway means as the oscillating wall portion moves in a direction to increase the volume of the chamber during said portion of the cycle, and (d) eject heated compressible fluid from the passageway means into a region of the chamber external to the passageway means as the oscillating wall portion moves in a direction to increase the volume of the chamber during said portion of the cycle; said cool fluid flow inducing means further including means for cooling fluid ejected from said heated passageway means, said means for sustaining including: (a) the heated fluid passageway means, (b) the flow inducing means including the motion of said wall portion and the means for cooling ejected fluid, (c) inertia of the structure, and (d) spring action of fluid compressed by the oscillating wall portion; wherein the energy for sustaining said oscillation is derived primarily from said heating and saiD cooling; wherein a net flow of fluid is induced into the heated passageway means while the volume of the chamber is decreasing during said portion of the cycle, said net flow being primarily and directly responsive to pressure variations of the fluid in the chamber resulting primarily and directly from changes in the chamber volume caused by the oscillating portion.
30. The device of claim 29 wherein said means for cooling said ejected fluid primarily comprises cooling of the ejected fluid by cool wall surfaces of the chamber external to said heated passageway means.
31. The device of claim 29 wherein said heating means includes means for heating said fluid passageway means substantially independently of the instantaneous phase of said at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion.
32. The device of claim 29 wherein said at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion includes two peripheral wall portions oscillating substantially in synchronism so as to, substantially with the same phase, cyclically decrease and increase the volume of the chamber.
33. The device of claim 32 wherein each of the wall portions is a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
34. The device of claim 33 further including groove means for each cylinder bypassing only a portion of the cylinder for positioning the center of oscillation of the free piston.
35. The device of claim 32 wherein said cooling of the ejected fluid primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber external to the heated passageway means.
36. The device of claim 35 wherein said cool walls primarily include walls of the chamber proximate the oscillating portions and the faces of the oscillating portions.
37. The device of claim 32 wherein the means for heating the passageway means includes means for heating the passageway means substantially independently of the instantaneous phases of the oscillating wall portions.
38. The device of claim 32 wherein said wall portions communicate both with each other and with said heated passageway means via a fluid flow connecting means, wherein said means for sustaining oscillation includes cooling of said ejected fluid by cool walls of the connecting means proximate the oscillating portions.
39. The device of claim 29 wherein said heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having an average length substantially greater than its average width.
40. The device of claim 29 wherein said chamber is substantially sealed during substantially all of the oscillatory cycle.
41. The device of claim 29 wherein said heating means includes means for heating said passageway means substantially independently of said natural resonant frequency of oscillation.
42. The device of claim 29 wherein said passageway means comprises an elongated passageway having an average length and an average breadth each of which is substantially greater than the average width of the passageway.
43. The device of claim 29 wherein there is an increase in effective exposure of a cool surface to fluid in the chamber as the wall portion moves in a direction to increase the chamber volume, whereby said means for cooling the ejected fluid includes cooling of the ejected fluid by said variably exposed cool surface.
44. The device of claim 29 wherein said heating of fluid in said passageway means and said cooling of ejected fluid each primarily comprises thermal transfer between the fluid and walls of the chamber.
45. The device of claim 29 wherein the means for sustaining oscillation includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool wall surfaces of the chamber proximate the oscillating portion.
46. The device of claim 45 wherein said cool wall surfaces include an exposed face of the oscillating portion.
47. The device of claim 29 wherein the heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having a characteristic passageway width selected in accordance with the oscillatory frequency to augment said oscillation.
48. The device of clAim 29 wherein the heated passageway means includes a multiplicity of heated elongated passageways.
49. The device of claim 29 wherein the passageway means is formed to mate with an electric bulb which provides heat for heating the passageway means.
50. The device of claim 29 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said heated passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place primarily while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
51. The device of claim 29 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said heated passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place substantially entirely while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
52. The device of claim 29 wherein said wall portion comprises a free piston oscillating in the cylinder.
53. The device of claim 52 further including cylinder bypass means for positioning the center of oscillation of the free piston in the cylinder.
54. The device of claim 53 wherein said bypass means bypasses only a portion of the cylinder, said center of oscillation being positioned near the mid-point of the bypassed portion.
55. The device of claim 54 wherein the bypass means includes a bypass passageway bypassing said bypassed cylinder portion and having substantially equal fluid flow impedance in either direction through the passageway.
56. The device of claim 55 wherein said passageway is of integral construction.
57. The device of claim 55 wherein said passageway is integral with the cylinder.
58. The device of claim 55 wherein said bypass means comprises groove means in the cylinder side-wall.
59. The device of claim 55 wherein said bypass means comprises means for forming the cylinder side wall to provide a lower impedance to fluid flow between the piston and cylinder side walls in the bypassed portion of the cylinder than in portions of the cylinder beyond the bypassed portion.
60. A naturally resonant oscillatory device comprising a variable volume chamber, said chamber having structure forming at least one wall portion susceptible to being oscillated at a natural resonant frequency of oscillation so as to alternately decrease and increase the volume of the chamber, said chamber maintained in a substantially closed condition during at least a portion of the oscillation cycle, said chamber having fluid passageway means communicating with the at least one wall portion, means for heating said fluid passageway means, means for sustaining oscillatory motion of the at least one wall portion of the chamber so as to alternately decrease and increase said chamber volume, means including the oscillatory motion of the wall portion for cyclically inducing a flow of cool fluid into said heated passageway means; said heated passageway means having a geometry and an average passageway width selected in accordance with the frequency of oscillation to readily admit said cool fluid and to heat by thermal transfer means substantially all of said admitted fluid so as to eject heated compressible fluid from the heated passageway means during said portion of the cycle as the oscillating wall portion moves in the same general direction as the ejected fluid and to heat fluid in the heated passageway means during said portion of the cycle as the oscillating wall portion moves in the same general direction as the ejectef fluid; said means for sustaining including: the heating of the fluid by said passageway means, the means for heating said passageway means, said flow inducing means, inertia of the structure and spring action of fluid compressed by the oscillating wall portion; wherein a net flow of fluid is induced into the heated passageway means while the fluid is being compressed toward the heated passageway means by the oscillating portion during said portion of the cycle, said net flow being primarily and directly responsive to pressure variations of the fluid in the chamber resulting primarily and directly from changes in tHe chamber volume caused by the oscillating portion.
61. The device of claim 60 wherein said cool fluid inducing means includes thermal transfer means for cooling said ejected fluid.
62. The device of claim 61 wherein said cooling means primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber external to the heated passageway means.
63. The device of claim 61 wherein said cooling means includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber cyclically varied in effective exposure to the fluid by the oscillating portion.
64. The device of claim 61 wherein said cooling provides the primary cooling for sustaining said oscillation.
65. The device of claim 60 wherein the cool fluid inducing means primarily includes cooling of the ejected fluid by cool walls of the chamber proximate the oscillating portion.
66. The device of claim 60 wherein the cool fluid inducing means includes means for cooling the induced fluid.
67. The device of claim 66 wherein the energy for sustaining said oscillation is derived primarily from said heating and said cooling.
68. The device of claim 60 wherein the heat energy for sustaining said oscillation is provided primarily by said heating.
69. The device of claim 60 wherein said fluid passageway means is heated substantially independently of the instantaneous phase of the oscillating portion.
70. The device of claim 69 wherein the at least one oscillating peripheral wall portion includes two peripheral wall portions oscillating substantially in synchronism so as to substantially together alternately decrease and increase said chamber volume.
71. The device of claim 70 wherein each of the wall portions is a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
72. The device of claim 71 wherein the heated passageway means is formed to be heated by an electric light bulb which provides sufficient heat energy for sustaining said oscillation while providing light for illumination of the surroundings.
73. The device of claim 72 further including groove means in the inside surface of the side-wall of each of said cylinders for controlling the center of oscillation of each piston in its cylinder.
74. The device of claim 70 wherein said wall portions communicate both with each other and with said heated passageway means via a fluid connecting means, and wherein said means for sustaining oscillation includes cooling of said induced fluid by cool walls of the connecting means proximate the oscillating portions.
75. The device of claim 69 wherein said heated passageway means includes an elongated passageway having an average length and an average breadth each of which is substantially greater than the average width of the passageway.
76. The device of claim 69 wherein said chamber is substantially sealed during substantially all of the oscillatory cycle.
77. The device of claim 69 wherein the heated passageway means includes a multiplicity of elongated heated passageways.
78. The device of claim 69 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place substantially entirely while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
79. The device of claim 60 wherein said passageway means is heated substantially independently of said natural resonant frequency of oscillation.
80. The device of claim 50 wherein said ejected heated fluid is derived primarily from cool fluid induced into said heated passageway means while said chamber volume decreases during said portion of the cycle.
81. The device of claim 60 wherein said inducing of cool fluid into said passageway means for said heating and ejecting of said fluid takes place primarily while said chamber volume is decreasing during said portion of the cycle.
82. The device of claim 60 wherein the wall portion comprises a free piston oscillating in a cylinder.
83. The device of claim 82 further including means bypassing only a portion of the cylinder to Position the center of oscillation of the free piston within the bypassed portion.
84. The device of claim 83 wherein the bypass means includes a bypass passageway bypassing said cylinder portion and having substantially equal impedance for fluid flow in either direction through the passageway.
85. The device of claim 83 wherein said bypass means comprises means for forming the cylinder side-wall to provide a greater mean separation between the piston and cylinder side walls in the bypassed cylinder portion than in a cylinder portion beyond the bypassed portion.
86. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said passageway and said port comprise an enlargement of the inside diameter of the cylinder in a region of the cylinder side-wall within said bypassed portion.
87. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein said passageway and said port for each cylinder comprise an enlargement of the inside diameter of the cylinder in a region of the cylinder side-wall within said bypassed portion.
88. The device of claim 82 further including means bypassing only a portion of the cylinder to position the center of oscillation of the free piston near the bypassed portion.
US465138A 1971-03-05 1974-04-29 Oscillating piston apparatus Expired - Lifetime US3899888A (en)

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Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4215548A (en) * 1978-10-12 1980-08-05 The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Free-piston regenerative hot gas hydraulic engine
US4271669A (en) * 1977-08-12 1981-06-09 Keller Arnulf A Reciprocating-piston engine, especially hot-gas engine or compressor
US4345437A (en) * 1980-07-14 1982-08-24 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Stirling engine control system
US4350012A (en) * 1980-07-14 1982-09-21 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Diaphragm coupling between the displacer and power piston
DE3223511A1 (en) * 1981-09-14 1983-03-24 William T. 45701 Athens Ohio Beale FREE-PISTON STIRLING MACHINE
US4387567A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-06-14 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Heat engine device
US4387568A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-06-14 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Stirling engine displacer gas bearing
US4408456A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-10-11 Mechanical Technolgy Incorporated Free-piston Stirling engine power control
US4418533A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-12-06 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Free-piston stirling engine inertial cancellation system
US4640667A (en) * 1983-04-29 1987-02-03 Sulzer Brothers Limited Apparatus for conveying and compressing a gaseous medium
WO2001063186A1 (en) * 2000-02-25 2001-08-30 586925 B.C. Inc. Heat transfer apparatus and method employing active regenerative cycle
DE102008010370A1 (en) * 2008-02-21 2009-08-27 Bernhard Emmert Thermal engine has working cylinder which has working chamber, where working chamber is loaded with working liquid with lower evaporation enthalpy
US20120073284A1 (en) * 2010-09-24 2012-03-29 Marketech International Corp. Hot zone heat transfer structure of a stirling engine
WO2014172277A1 (en) * 2013-04-15 2014-10-23 Parker-Hannifin Corporation Internal cooling of a working fluid that is compressed in a piston-cylinder assembly
US20240271835A1 (en) * 2021-06-03 2024-08-15 Jonathan Nord Stirling engine with near isothermal working spaces

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3807904A (en) * 1971-03-05 1974-04-30 M Schuman Oscillating piston apparatus

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3807904A (en) * 1971-03-05 1974-04-30 M Schuman Oscillating piston apparatus

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4271669A (en) * 1977-08-12 1981-06-09 Keller Arnulf A Reciprocating-piston engine, especially hot-gas engine or compressor
US4215548A (en) * 1978-10-12 1980-08-05 The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Free-piston regenerative hot gas hydraulic engine
US4387568A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-06-14 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Stirling engine displacer gas bearing
US4350012A (en) * 1980-07-14 1982-09-21 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Diaphragm coupling between the displacer and power piston
US4387567A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-06-14 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Heat engine device
US4345437A (en) * 1980-07-14 1982-08-24 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Stirling engine control system
US4408456A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-10-11 Mechanical Technolgy Incorporated Free-piston Stirling engine power control
US4418533A (en) * 1980-07-14 1983-12-06 Mechanical Technology Incorporated Free-piston stirling engine inertial cancellation system
DE3223511A1 (en) * 1981-09-14 1983-03-24 William T. 45701 Athens Ohio Beale FREE-PISTON STIRLING MACHINE
US4640667A (en) * 1983-04-29 1987-02-03 Sulzer Brothers Limited Apparatus for conveying and compressing a gaseous medium
WO2001063186A1 (en) * 2000-02-25 2001-08-30 586925 B.C. Inc. Heat transfer apparatus and method employing active regenerative cycle
DE102008010370A1 (en) * 2008-02-21 2009-08-27 Bernhard Emmert Thermal engine has working cylinder which has working chamber, where working chamber is loaded with working liquid with lower evaporation enthalpy
US20120073284A1 (en) * 2010-09-24 2012-03-29 Marketech International Corp. Hot zone heat transfer structure of a stirling engine
WO2014172277A1 (en) * 2013-04-15 2014-10-23 Parker-Hannifin Corporation Internal cooling of a working fluid that is compressed in a piston-cylinder assembly
US20240271835A1 (en) * 2021-06-03 2024-08-15 Jonathan Nord Stirling engine with near isothermal working spaces

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