Minto wheel

Minto wheel

Minto wheel rotating through heated water
Classification Heat engines
Application Toy, Scientific demonstration
Fuel source Heat transfer
Components Bulbs, Tubes, Axle

The Minto wheel is a heat engine developed by Wally Minto. The engine consists of a set of sealed chambers arranged in a circle, with each chamber connected to the chamber opposite it. One chamber in each connected pair is filled with a liquid with a low boiling point (propane (TB = 42 °C) and R-12 (TB = 29.8 °C) are listed in the Mother Earth News articles).

Operation

As the lower chamber in each pair is heated, the liquid begins to vaporize, forcing the remaining liquid to travel to the upper chamber. This fluid transfer causes a weight imbalance, which causes the wheel to rotate. Minto's pamphlet also suggests obtaining a pressure differential with a dissolved gas instead of a boiling gas. Soda water or propane dissolved in kerosene are suggested.

Characteristics

The Minto wheel operates on a small temperature gradient, and produces a large amount of torque, but at very low rotational speed. The speed of rotation is directly proportional to the surface area of the containers used, the volume, and the height of the wheel. The higher the ratio of surface area to volume, the greater the rate of revolution.

Examples

A working example of a Minto wheel was first published in a series of articles in The Mother Earth News, Issues #38 March, #39 May and #40 July 1976. Test units constructed by Mother Earth News (Issue 40, July 1976) and the MythBusters (Episode 24, December 5, 2004 "Ming Dynasty Astronaut") did work to convert temperature difference into torque; however not as well as overenthusiastic boosters claimed.

See also

External links

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