By Nico DeMattia March 22, 2026 5:25 am EST
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A Stirling engine in its most basic form is essentially a single cylinder with a piston-style "displacer" inside of it. The displacer isn't airtight, so there's a small air gap between it and the cylinder walls. Above and below the cylinder are metal plates. The bottom plate is warmed by an external heat source underneath it, and on the top plate is a piston attached to a wheel that's connected to the displacer. As the bottom plate warms, it heats the air at the bottom of the cylinder, which expands the air and pushes the piston up, turning the wheel and pushing the displacer back down.
As the displacer goes down, the hot air inside the cylinder rises to the top and the heat escapes through the top metal plate into the room's ambient air. That cooling effect sucks the piston back down, which then turns the wheel, and brings the displacer back up. As the displacer rises, it forces the air back down to the bottom of the cylinder, where it's reheated and the process repeats. That process will turn the wheel for as long as there's a temperature differential between the top and bottom plates. And it works in reverse, too, if the top plate is hot and bottom plate is cold.
How does that create cold air, though? Well, if you manually or mechanically turn the wheel instead of using a temperature differential, the moving air inside the cylinder will make one plate hot and one plate cold. If you scale that up by using a big Stirling engine with an electric motor to drive the wheel quickly, you can theoretically harness the cold air created from one of the plates.
Modern refrigeration uses evaporative cooling, but the Stirling engine is still used
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Once evaporative cooling using liquid refrigerant was figured out in 1834 by American inventor Jacob Perkins, the Stirling engine's cooling usage was mostly killed off. Evaporative cooling still works by transferring heat from one place to another – it just does so with liquid chemicals (some of which are safer than others) that evaporate at low temperatures and pressure.
Evaporative cooling is actually far older than the Stirling engine. It's as old as 2,000 BCE, in fact, with ancient civilizations storing liquid in clay pots which were soaked in water. That water would evaporate, drawing heat away from the the pot and cooling the liquid inside. However, the Stirling engine's transfer of hot and cold air from one area was the precursor to using evaporative cooling to send that colder air somewhere else.
There are still some uses for Stirling-style engines, but most of them have to do with generating efficient mechanical power without the use of internal combustion. Some submarines use Stirling engines to generate power underwater, as diesel engines in those submarines need air. There are a few applications where Stirling engines are used for cooling, too. Stirling Cryogenerators can generate temperatures as low as -258 degrees Celsius, though they're far more advanced and complex than Robert Stirling's original design. Some companies are even looking into highly efficient Stirling-style engines to create air refrigeration without using chemicals that pollute the earth – but the purposes of those engines are far from commercial.
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The 1816 Stirling engine's heat transfer mechanism became the foundation for modern air conditioning systems.
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This breakthrough enabled the widespread refrigeration that preserves our food and cools our buildings today.
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Ancient civilizations used evaporative cooling as early as 2,000 BCE with water-soaked clay pots.