Submitted by ranman12953 t3_10dg022 in askscience
Inutilisable t1_j4mfa65 wrote
Reply to comment by bgraham111 in How do non electric heat operated fans work? by ranman12953
What is tricky about the manufacturing exactly?
SacredRose t1_j4n4dfc wrote
You need to build something with as little friction as possible and it needs to run super smooth all the way around. I imagine the precision machining needed to build larger versions is gonna be pretty high and tricky so it won’t be cheap.
Inutilisable t1_j4n7mm4 wrote
I designed lab equipments with precision pistons made of graphite in glass tubes. It’s really good but it is expensive, especially in low quantities, something like >40$ for 1/2” diameter piston, a few inches long. There was no other way to get low friction. I imagine that other constraints gets involved when you want to get any useful energy from it, at large scale.
joalheagney t1_j4pb3u8 wrote
The other big issue is the driving gas. You want something with a really low molecular mass for maximum thermal expansion. Hydrogen gas would be ideal if it didn't have a distressing tendency to diffuse into and through metals. And. You know. Explode in contact with heat and Oxygen.
Helium is half as good (twice the MM) ... but incredibly expensive and almost as hard to contain. Doesn't explode though which is good.
And then you're into N2, O2 and you may as well use air for obvious reasons. At about 14 times the MW of hydrogen gas. :/
[deleted] t1_j4mkyk6 wrote
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[deleted] t1_j4q3lhr wrote
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