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ericsson cycle การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Another cycle that features isothermal heat-addition and heat-rejection processes is the Ericsson cycle.
  • Also the use of regeneration in the Ericsson cycle increases efficiency by reducing the required heat input.
  • The second Ericsson cycle is the cycle most commonly referred to as simply the " Ericsson cycle ".
  • The second Ericsson cycle is the cycle most commonly referred to as simply the " Ericsson cycle ".
  • The Ericsson cycle is similar to the Brayton cycle but uses external heat and incorporates the use of a regenerator.
  • His " first " cycle is now known as the closed Brayton cycle, while his second cycle is what is now called the Ericsson cycle.
  • The "'Ericsson cycle "'is named after inventor John Ericsson, who designed and built many unique heat engines based on various thermodynamic cycles.
  • Compared to the Brayton cycle which uses adiabatic compression and expansion, the second Ericsson cycle uses isothermal compression and expansion, thus producing more net work per stroke.
  • An important advantage of the Ericsson cycle over the widely known Stirling engine is often not recognized : the volume of the heat exchanger does not adversely affect the efficiency.
  • The Ericsson cycle is an altered version of the Carnot cycle in which the two isentropic processes featured in the Carnot cycle are replaced by two constant-pressure regeneration processes.
  • The ( second ) Ericsson cycle is also the limit of an ideal gas-turbine Brayton cycle, operating with multistage intercooled compression, and multistage expansion with reheat and regeneration.
  • The Ericsson cycle ( and the similar Brayton cycle ) receives renewed interest today to extract power from the exhaust heat of gas ( and producer gas ) engines and solar concentrators.
  • Cycles that model external combustion engines include the Brayton cycle, which models gas turbines, the Rankine cycle, which models steam turbines, the Stirling cycle, which models hot air engines, and the Ericsson cycle, which also models hot air engines.