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Buoyed By J-20 Success, China Claims To Have Built World’s ‘Most Powerful’ Emission-Free Engine For Submarines

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Buoyed By J-20 Success, China Claims To Have Built World’s ‘Most Powerful’ Emission-Free Engine For Submarines
By Sakshi Tiwari
December 24, 2021

After having shown its efficiency with WS-10 engines, which reportedly power some of the J-20 stealth fighters of the PLA Air Force, China has now claimed to have achieved a new feat in the realm of engine manufacturing.

China recently made significant progress in the development of what it calls the “world’s most powerful Stirling engine”, a form of heat engine that is used in power production and submarine propulsion reported the state-controlled Global Times.

The basic prototype of China’s first large-bore Stirling engine, developed by the No. 711 Research Institute under the China State Shipbuilding Corporation Limited (CSSC), is reported to have passed a performance test.


The prototype of the engine has a rated output of 320 kilowatts and a power conversion efficiency of 40%, making it the world’s most powerful Stirling engine, according to a statement posted on the CSSC’s WeChat account on December 21.

“The prototype’s accomplishment marks a watershed moment in China’s development of critical technologies and craftsmanship for such engines, laying the groundwork for the country’s future production of megawatt-class Stirling engines,” stated the CSSC in its press release.

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Y-20-China

China has faced challenges developing various sorts of engines, but the success in the domestically made Stirling engine is just one example of the country’s quick progress in recent years, an unnamed Chinese military specialist told Global Times.

The communist nation has reportedly been working on various engine prototypes. After having successfully developed a modern engine for the J-20 Mighty Dragon fighter, it has accelerated the work and testing of engines for other aircraft. According to media reports, testing is underway for Y-20 transport aircraft engines.

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A J-20 fighter jet powered by WS-10C at Zhuhai airshow. (via Twitter)

All these developments indicate that China is making consistent efforts to manufacture engines domestically for both, military and commercial aircraft. However, the domestic engine effort has not been devoid of setbacks. Earlier, a failure was reported in the testing of the WS-15 engine that was originally meant for the J-20 stealth fighters.

However, the claims about the most powerful Sterling engine in the world, if true, could give the much-needed fillip to Chinese engine manufacturing.

What Is A Stirling Engine?
A Stirling engine is a heat engine in which the air is heated by external combustion through a heat exchanger and then displaced, compressed, and expanded by two pistons. It is more efficient and less polluting than most other jet engines used today.

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A Chinese nuclear submarine. (via Twitter)

The Sterling engine has been developed for a variety of applications since the 1970s, including cryogenic refrigeration, submarine propulsion, and electrical generation. This means that the Stirling engine has both, military as well as civil applications.

According to Interesting Engineering, a Stirling engine’s gas never escapes the engine. It is repeatedly heated and cooled, so it is never expelled in the form of an explosive exhaust. Because this regenerative engine can generate electricity using the same gas multiple times, it can be far more efficient than an internal combustion engine. Stirling engines are also very quiet because there are no explosions taking place.


In a variety of configurations, the engine can be paired with any type of heat source, whether conventional or nuclear. A Stirling engine of the megawatt-class is well-structured, has a simple system, and can be started and configured in modules fast.

According to the CSSC, the Stirling engine will provide considerable benefits as it can spawn a series of variations to suit the need for power supply, ranging from 100 kilowatts to several megawatts, and can be developed into a portable micro reactor power generator for use in extreme environments like polar regions, remote islands, or even China’s Gobi Desert.

As China expands its military footprint, the versatility of this engine will provide more teeth and maneuverability in the climate and topographies in which it aims to operate. The ability of the engine to take in nuclear energy as the heat source makes it stand out and could ideally prove to be very cost-effective.

Will Chinese Subs Get Sterling Engines?
The Stirling engine is well recognized for its use in submarine propulsion, say military observers.

According to an article released by Saab, the parent company of Kockums, which manufactures submarines, Stirling engine air-independent propulsion (AIP) systems enable them to avoid traveling to the surface to charge the batteries. This allows the submarines to extend their submerged endurance from days to weeks.

The Stirling engine is quiet and vibration-free, therefore no vibrations are transmitted to the hull, making the submarine silent in the water and hence extremely difficult to locate.

The Chinese Stirling engine’s possible deployment on submarines was not mentioned in the CSSC press release. However, as the seas become the new flashpoint between China and the West in the Indo-Pacific region, the PLA Navy could soon be powering its submarines with Sterling engines, following the Saab model.

 
A Stirling engine is a heat engine in which the air is heated by external combustion through a heat exchanger and then displaced, compressed, and expanded by two pistons. It is more efficient and less polluting than most other jet engines used today.

Learn physics man, then stop using Google Translate. This is gobledygook

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Learn physics man, then stop using Google Translate. This is gobledygook

View attachment 803428
Learn opening links. Google translation?

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Interestingly, the article talk about using the stirling engine with liquid metal sodium cooled reactor.

That remind me of this,
Kilopower is an experimental project aimed at producing new nuclear reactors for space travel.[1][2] The project started in October 2015, led by NASA and the DoE’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).[3] As of 2017, the Kilopower reactors were intended to come in four sizes, able to produce from one to ten kilowatts of electrical power (1-10 kWe) continuously for twelve to fifteen years.[4][5] The fission reactor uses uranium-235 to generate heat that is carried to the Stirling converters with passive sodium heat pipes.[6] In 2018, positive test results for the Kilopower Reactor Using Stirling Technology (KRUSTY) demonstration reactor were announced.[7]
Potential applications include nuclear electric propulsion and a steady electricity supply for crewed or robotic space missions that require large amounts of power, especially where sunlight is limited or not available. NASA has also studied the Kilopower reactor as the power supply for crewed Mars missions. During those missions, the reactor would be responsible for powering the machinery necessary to separate and cryogenically store oxygen from the Martian atmosphere for ascent vehicle propellants. Once humans arrive the reactor would power their life-support systems and other requirements. NASA studies have shown that a 40 kWe reactor would be sufficient to support a crew of between 4 and 6 astronauts.[8]
 
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