William T. Beale (1928 – 2016)
William
Beale was a mechanical
engineering professor at Ohio University
in
the 1960's. In 1964 he invented one of the most ingenious external
heat source engines yet devised – the Free Piston Stirling Engine.
Based on this invention he founded the company Sunpower,
Inc.
in
1974, which over the years developed many innovative, high efficiency
heat engines and cryocoolers, using various external heat sources,
including solar and wood pellets.
William Beale was a man of ideas
and actions whose mind never stopped looking for ways to improve the
world even to the end (Refer to his 2012
Ohio Patent Legacy Award
interview. He lived what he preached.
At the memorial service
held on 24 September 2016, William's son, Dan Beale, presented the
following Remarks
at the memorial service for my father.
William T. Beale – 1977
|
William T. Beale – 2016
|
I
visited William a few weeks before his passing, and he sent me the
following statement which he requested that I present at the 2016
ISEC,
to which I have added some links:
Statement
by William (July 2016):
I
was happy to see that there are so many keynote speeches scheduled at
ISEC 2016 from free piston Stirling companies. I gather that free
piston products dominate certain niche markets. My goal in this
statement is to point out that mass markets are now within reach.
It
seems to me possible to dramatically simplify your free piston
designs, stamp out excess cost and attack much larger markets. Some
obvious steps present themselves. The first - examine what free
piston products performed best in the past in terms of balance,
sealing, centering, heat exchanger designs and so forth. Look at what
NASA chose for deep space power - and the remarkable performance they
achieved.
Consider the free piston alpha, which beats Diesel
as a vehicle power plant, according to NASA
technical memorandum 82992,
and also provides high efficiency in a very wide range of sizes from
100 Watts to megawatts, and quick response to load.
Revisit
the 1985 text "Free
Piston Stirling Engines"
by Walker and Senft, to see how well some of the cheap early machines
performed, and how versatile these engines were in many applications.
An example from the book is the simple hydrogen-charged free cylinder
engine, with its automatic load matching and high specific power.
Also look up Biowatt,
an early wood-pellet fired system.
By learning from such past
efforts cost may be reduced greatly, creating big mass market
opportunities. Foremost among these, in the carbon-constrained world
of the near future, is the biomass-fired home power plant which
complements photovoltaics. Any fuel, with or without pre-processing,
could be used to power a free piston Stirling that automatically
recharges a home battery bank when charge levels get low. If
pyrolysis is used for pre-processing and the resulting biochar is
returned to the soil, one has the ideal future power plant:
un-interruptable, maintenance-free and carbon-negative in all sizes
from domestic on up.
The free piston Stirling community
history gives examples of opportunities to simplify designs and slash
costs to a fraction of the current values. If you succeed in that,
you'll see that the age of commercial Stirling is just
beginning.
Best wishes to all
William T. Beale
(1928-2016)
_____________________________________________________________________
Based
on discussions with David Berchowitz, I wish to add the following to
William's statement concerning the free-cylinder
water pump.
In this engine a heavy internal mass provides the reaction force
driving the cylinder which is directly connected to the water pump.
It has built in power adjustment and responds to load automatically.
All other engines require a transmission and complicated control
mechanisms to do this. Furthermore, there is no other mechanical heat
engine that we know of that operates from infinite load to zero
without either stalling or destroying itself.
Another attractive
feature of the free cylinder system is that it can be constructed
from inexpensive easy-to-obtain components. In fact, the entire pump
housing can be fabricated from ordinary PVC piping and fixtures. The
reliability, simplicity and low cost of this engine makes it
eminently suitable for application in developing countries, and in
the 1970's it was extensively tested both in the field and in the
laboratory (Refer to the 1979 presentation by William A
Free-Cylinder Stirling Engine for Solar Powered Water Pumps).