Abstract

<p class="Abstract">Thermoacoustic prime mover is a device which converts thermal energy into acoustic work. The device mainly consists of a resonator pipe, a stack (a porous medium), and two heat exchangers. Four stacks were made of a pile of stainless wire-mesh screens with various mesh numbers of #12, #14, #16, and #18, providing the effective hydraulic radius of 0.32 mm, 0.28 mm, 0.25 mm, 0.23 mm, respectively. Each stack has 4 cm length. By using the wire-mesh screens, it is easier to vary the hydraulic radius of stack than any other material. The stack is sandwiched between a hot heat exchanger and an ambient heat exchanger. The resonator is made of a stainless-steel pipe with one end open and the other closed. The stack and heat exchangers are placed inside a resonator pipe near the closed end. The thermal energy were provided by using an electric heater which is installed at the hot heat exchanger. Ambient water was flowing through the ambient heat exchanger. Sound is produced by the stack when the temperature difference between the both ends of stack reachs an onset point. This experiments were performed by recording the temperatures at both ends of stack and the pressure amplitudes of the sound at several points along the resonator for various hydraulic radius of stack. It is found that the effective hydraulic radius of 0.28 mm gives the lowest onset temperature, the shortest time to reach onset condition, and the highest pressure amplitude which are 314°C, 299 s, and 2.89 kPa, respectively. The frequency of sound is not altered by the change of hydraulic radius of stack.</p>

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