![]() HEAT TRANSFER-RELIEF ENGINE AND REGENERATION
专利摘要:
The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine (1) comprises a compressor (2) which discharges gases into a regeneration high-pressure pipe (6) of a regeneration heat exchanger (5) from which they emerge preheated via a pipe high-pressure regenerator outlet (9) which comprises a heat source (12) which superheats said gas, the latter being then transferred by an intake metering valve (24) operated by a metering valve actuator (25) in a transfer-expansion chamber (16) in particular formed by an expansion cylinder (13) and an expansion piston (15), said gases emerging from said chamber (16) after having been expanded via an exhaust gas exhaust duct (26) and through an exhaust valve (31) actuated by an exhaust valve actuator (32) before being cooled in a low-pressure regeneration line (7) that includes the heat exchanger degeneration (5). 公开号:FR3032236A1 申请号:FR1561704 申请日:2015-12-02 公开日:2016-08-05 发明作者:Vianney Rabhi 申请人:Vianney Rabhi; IPC主号:
专利说明:
[0001] BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to a heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine. [0002] The most commonly used internal combustion reciprocating engines run the Otto or Beau de Rochas cycle for spark ignition engines, or the Diesel cycle for compression ignition engines. Various variants of these cycles in particular allow improved yields such as the Miller cycle or the Atkinson cycle. The main distinguishing features are four-stroke engines that cycle through four piston races, two-stroke engines that cycle in just two piston races. [0003] The vast majority of spark-ignition engines deliver a maximum efficiency that hardly exceeds thirty-five percent. The fast diesel engines that power cars or trucks deliver a peak efficiency of the order of forty to forty-five percent. Only very slow two-stroke diesel engines of a very large displacement exceed the fifty percent efficiency on their best operating points. Thus, whatever the application case or the type of reciprocating internal combustion engine, between half and two thirds of the energy content of the fuel are lost. [0004] The energy losses consist essentially of heat emitted at the exhaust and heat exported by the cooling system. Friction losses and pumping losses also constitute a significant energy loss which is also reflected in the dispersion of heat in the environment. Of minor importance, unburned or partially burned fuel is also a loss. These losses arise from various inherent limitations in the design of reciprocating internal combustion engines according to the state of the art. [0005] In the first place, it is noted that in said engines, there is a great difference between, on the one hand, the maximum temperature reached by the gases during their combustion and, on the other hand, the temperature at which the internal walls of said engines, that is to say their cylinders, cylinder head and piston caps. Said walls are indeed cooled because on the one hand, it is necessary to maintain at an acceptable temperature the oil which covers them in thin layer and lubricates the segments and the pistons, and because on the other hand, if the temperature of said walls is too much high, the fresh gases entering said cylinders are immediately heated to excess upon their introduction into said cylinders which has the effect of limiting the mass of said gas can be introduced into said cylinders same admission pressure. [0006] In addition, particularly in the case of spark-ignition engines, if the fresh gases are excessively heated in the intake phase, the charge they constitute with the fuel becomes sensitive to the detonation and must either be delayed combustion or to limit the compression. These two corrective measures deteriorate the performance of said engines. In addition, if the admitted fresh gases are excessively heated, their temperature at the end of combustion and at the beginning of relaxation will be higher and they will produce more nitrogen oxides, which are pollutants. Cooling the internal walls of conventional reciprocating internal combustion engines is therefore essential. However, said cooling leads to a significant loss of energy and efficiency leading to high fuel consumption. Among the other limitations inherent in the design of internal combustion engine reciprocating engines according to the state of the art, it is noted that the admission of fresh gases, the combustion of said gases and the expansion of said gases take place in the same chamber. . However, it would take a cold room to accommodate the fresh gas, and a rather hot room to prevent heat loss when said gas is burned. This is not the case. The various phases that are the admission of fresh gases, their pre-compression, combustion-expansion, and their so-called "exhaust" evacuation occurring in the same chamber and the same cylinder, said phases can not take place simultaneously and must to succeed one another in time. This sequencing involves intermittent combustion which must be initiated and developed at each cycle. Therefore, it is necessary to gather for each firing the conditions necessary for its smooth running in a very short time. These conditions vary greatly depending on engine speed and load. It results from this a large production of unburnt, a combustion operated at variable volume since it is necessary to allow the latter time to develop without it being possible to stop the piston, and a great sensitivity to nature fuel that must ignite without detonation spark ignition, and must burn under all circumstances diesel despite the absence of any spark ignition. With regard to spark ignition engines, the decisive importance of the homogeneity and the composition of the charge introduced into the cylinders and in particular of the air / fuel ratio is noted, both for reasons of flammability of said charge, only for reasons of post-treatment of the pollutants produced by the combustion of said charge, for example by means of a three-way catalyst. [0007] We also note the strong dependence of these engines on the compression ratio. In theory, it should be as high as possible to achieve maximum throttle and collect the maximum work on the piston. In practice, the limits of detonation of the fuel and the control of the exchanges of heat with the internal walls of the engine fix the compression ratio admissible by the latter well below the compression ratio theoretically ideal for the yield. Since the combustion of Otto or Diesel cycle engines takes place in a very short time, the particular sensitivity of said engines to the rod / crank ratio on which the law of variation of the volume of the combustion chamber is based. Since the combustion is not operated at a constant volume, a part of said combustion takes place before the top dead center of the piston in a volume that is reduced, which leads to an unnecessarily high temperature of the gases and to harmful heat losses. to the thermodynamic efficiency, while the other part of said combustion occurs after the top dead center of the piston in a volume increasing so that a part of said combustion occurs during the expansion, which is also detrimental thermodynamic efficiency. The sequential nature of the Otto or Diesel cycles also involves generating the turbulence necessary to ensure sufficient air-fuel homogeneity, and to wrinkle the flame front to promote its propagation in the volume of the combustion chamber. In addition to generating additional pumping losses, said turbulence increases the heat exchange between the hot gases and the walls that expose them to the cylinder, the cylinder head and the piston. As such, said turbulence increases the thermal losses which limit the yield. [0008] Once the expansion of the burnt gas performed to collect the work, said gases are discharged into the atmosphere without the engine allows to re-exploit the residual heat. [0009] As an alternative to reciprocating internal combustion engines according to the state of the art, Brayton cycle turbine centrifugal motors with regeneration are known. The most advanced version of these engines is unquestionably that providing at least two stages of compressors with intercooler. This configuration makes best use of the regeneration exchanger and is for example implemented in the engine "Rolls-Royce WR-21" for some military vessels. The efficiency of these motors exceeds forty percent. These engines have the advantage of operating a combustion no longer sequential but continuous, and to separate in space and entrust to dedicated organs the different phases of the thermodynamic cycle that are the admission, the compression, the combustion, the relaxation, and the exhaust. Unfortunately, these regenerative Brayton cycle engines ultimately offer only slightly better performance than spark ignition engines. This performance is comparable to that of fast diesel engines and is lower than that of slow two-stroke diesel engines and very large displacement. In addition, the energy efficiency of regenerative Brayton cycle engines drops rapidly outside the power range where they produce their best performance. Moreover, in power transients, their response time is long. Their scope is therefore limited. Another notorious limitation of regenerative Brayton cycle engines is their high dependence on the efficiency of the centrifugal turbines and compressors that make up them. In the current state of the art and technique, the performance of these components is limited, and the remaining margins of progress do not allow to envisage a short-term technological leap capable of making the said engines competitive with respect to the alternative engines. Diesel cycle. However, calculations show that a regenerative Brayton cycle engine equipped with a power turbine and two staged turbochargers with intercooler could theoretically deliver a very high total efficiency, greater than fifty percent. For this, it is necessary that the centrifugal turbines and compressors which constitute it have a yield of the order of ninety to ninety percent while that of the regeneration exchanger must be of the order of ninety-five percent . If the efficiency of these organs is further increased, the final yield may rise to seventy percent or more for combustion temperatures of the order of only one thousand to one hundred and one hundred degrees Celsius. [0010] Unfortunately, these compression and expansion yields of gases are almost inaccessible to centrifugal compressors and turbines. However, these yields are theoretically accessible to piston machines provided that their volumetric efficiency is sufficient and that the pumping and friction losses they generate are sufficiently low. The necessary yields mentioned for the countercurrent temperature exchangers are also available. The problem lies mainly in the realization of an expansion cylinder whose temperature of the internal walls is close to the very high combustion gases which is of the order of a thousand degrees Celsius or more. Such a cylinder must remain perennial, waterproof and mechanically reliable. The first problem lies in the sealing means between said cylinder and the piston with which it cooperates because in the current state of the art, such means are non-existent. Achieving such sealing means is one of the objectives of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention. Said motor thus provides to give its expansion cylinder a good seal and resistance to very high temperatures centrifugal turbines. [0011] Thus equipped with this first essential characteristic, said engine can implement the equivalent of a regenerative Brayton cycle either with centrifugal turbines and compressors, but with compressors and a volumetric piston reciprocating cylinder. Note also that in addition to producing a cylinder compatible with very high temperatures, the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention proposes to control the filling and emptying of said cylinder to make the best use of the transfer phases and relaxing producing work. [0012] It follows from the invention a heat engine transfer-trigger and regeneration: - Whose phases of admission-compression, combustion and expansion-exhaust are separated, and are entrusted to dedicated organs designed and sized to support their mechanical load and specific thermal, closer to the need; - The residual heat of the expanded gases is largely recycled to produce additional work which leads to minimal heat losses; - The temperature of the walls of the expansion cylinder is close to that of the hot gases before they are relaxed, which leads to minimal heat losses; - The main components of which do not require cooling, which leads to minimal heat losses; - Whose crank / crank ratio has no influence on performance; - Whose geometric volumetric ratio has no effect on the yield, the latter being close to that produced by an infinite volumetric ratio; - The combustion of the air-fuel mixture can operate over a wide range of richness and large excess of air relative to the stoichiometry; - whose combustion is continuous and is not dependent on the propagation of a flame front in the three-dimensional space of a combustion chamber; - - - - - - - Whose combustion - in addition to being continuous and carried out in excess of air - is operated at a lower maximum temperature than that found in conventional reciprocating engines, this conjunction of conditions for producing said combustion allowing to produce few pollutants at the source so as to reduce or even eliminate the use of an oxidation catalyst, a three-way catalyst, or any after-treatment device of nitrogen oxides or particulate filter. Which can be internal or external combustion, in the latter case the combustion can be replaced by a sufficiently intense heat source of solar origin, nuclear, or any other origin; Who can consume any liquid fuel such as diesel fuel, gasoline of whatever quality, ethanol or any type of alcohol, or any gaseous fuel such as liquefied petroleum gas, methane or hydrogen; Which, particularly if it is an external combustion, may consume coal, wood or any solid combustible waste; Whose speed and power range on which is found a high energy efficiency is significantly wider than that of turbine engines; Whose transient load and / or speed response is higher than that of turbine engines; Whose acoustic and vibratory emissions are lower than those of conventional internal combustion reciprocating engines whether spark-ignition or diesel, because of a maximum pressure and a maximum pressure gradient found in its expansion cylinder which are much lower than those found in the cylinders of said conventional engines, and because of a lower pressure of the flash gases when released into the environment; - whose efficiency is little dependent on the unit cubic capacity and whose feasibility and efficiency are practically dependent on no dimension or high or low power; - Whose efficiency of conversion of heat to work is much higher than that of conventional reciprocating internal combustion engines whatever the principle which leads, at the same job, to a lower fuel consumption than that of said engines conventional and possibly associated lower carbon dioxide emissions. [0013] It is understood that the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine according to the invention is adaptable to any machine or apparatus requiring a driving source to move and / or move like an automobile, a motorcycle, a truck, a locomotive , a ship, a construction, handling, lifting or military machine or any other motor vehicle. The transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine according to the invention can also produce the driving power required for stationary appliances such as an electricity generator, a hydraulic pump or any industrial or domestic machine that requires a source of movement. [0014] These examples of application of the heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration according to the invention are given in a non-limiting manner. The other features of the present invention have been described in the description and in the dependent claims directly or indirectly dependent on the main claim. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises: - At least one compressor capable of drawing gases at a certain pressure via a compressor inlet duct to discharge them to a higher pressure in a compressor outlet duct ; At least one regeneration heat exchanger consisting of at least one regeneration high-pressure pipe and at least one regeneration low-pressure pipe, a first end that comprises said high-pressure pipe being connected to the outlet pipe; compressor while the circulating gases in the low-pressure regeneration duct can yield part of their heat to the circulating gases in the high-pressure regeneration duct; At least one regenerator high-pressure outlet duct which comprises a first end connected to a second end that comprises the high-pressure regeneration duct; At least one heat source placed at any point in the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct and which can superheat gases flowing in said duct; - At least one expansion cylinder whose at least one end is closed by a cylinder cylinder cylinder built in cylinder cylinder or reported on the latter, said cylinder housing a piston expander with which it performs a seal to form a transfer chamber-volume expansion variable, said piston being able to move in said cylinder and being directly or indirectly connected to a power output shaft by mechanical transmission means so as to print to said shaft a continuous rotational movement when said piston makes movements of va-and - comes in the cylinder regulator; At least one hot gas intake duct which has a first end connected to a second end that comprises the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct, said intake duct comprising a second end which passes through the cylinder head of the expander cylinder; exit into the pressure reducer cylinder via a hot gas inlet duct mouth; At least one metering valve operated by a metering valve actuator, said valve being able to close off or open the hot gas inlet duct mouth; At least one exhaust gas exhaust duct which comprises a first end which passes through the cylinder head of the expansion valve to open into the expansion valve cylinder through a vent pipe mouth of the expanded gas, said exhaust pipe also comprising a second end connected to a first end that comprises the low-pressure regeneration conduit; At least one exhaust valve operated by an exhaust valve actuator, said valve being able to close off or open the outlet of the exhaust gas duct; - At least one motor output conduit placed in the extension of a second end that includes the low-pressure regeneration conduit, or coincides with said second end to constitute with the latter one single piece. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a compressor which is two-stage and which consists of a low-pressure compressor whose output is connected to the inlet of a high-pressure compressor via a compressor intercooler. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a power output shaft which rotates the compressor. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a compressor inlet duct which comprises a water injector which can spray liquid water into the circulating gases in said duct 30 before said gases are introduced into a suction-discharge chamber that defines the compressor that sucks them. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a compressor which defines a suction-discharge chamber into which a water injector opens, the latter being able to spray liquid water into the gases introduced into said chamber after said gases have been sucked via the compressor inlet duct by said compressor. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a compressor outlet conduit which has an air-water separator. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises an engine outlet conduit which includes a condensing gas dryer. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a compressor which has a compressor inlet metering valve whose opening and closing are controlled by a compressor inlet metering valve actuator, said valve being able to open connecting the compressor inlet duct with a suction-discharge chamber that defines the compressor. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a high-pressure regeneration duct and a low-pressure regeneration duct which are contiguous to one another over all or part of their length, the direction of the circulation of the gases contained in the high-pressure regeneration duct being opposite to the flow direction of the gases contained in the low-pressure regeneration duct, the two said ducts constituting a countercurrent heat exchanger. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a heat source which is a burner consisting of a fuel injector and a combustion chamber. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a heat source which consists of a primary heat exchanger which extracts heat from a universal source of heat to transmit said heat to the gases flowing through the reactor. regenerator high pressure outlet conduit directly, or via a secondary heat transport circuit. [0015] The heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to the present invention comprises a cylinder cylinder regulator which comprises a pressure equalizing valve which closes or not a conduit connecting the transfer-expansion chamber and the hot gas inlet duct said valve being open if the pressure prevailing in the transfer-expansion chamber is greater than that prevailing in the inlet duct of the hot gases so that the gases pass from said chamber to said duct, said valve being otherwise closed so that said gases can not pass from said conduit to said chamber via said valve. [0016] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a transfer-expansion chamber which comprises at least one temperature-maintaining fuel injector. [0017] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a transfer-expansion chamber which comprises at least one anti-NOx water injector. The heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to the present invention comprises a piston expander which is connected to the mechanical transmission means by a piston rod expander which passes through the cylinder cylinder expander, a seal being formed between said rod and said cylinder head by stem sealing means. [0018] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises rod sealing means which comprise an upper rod seal and a lower rod seal sufficiently far apart to form between said two rods. seals - an oil-circulating chamber into which a cooling-lubricating oil supply line opens and from which a cooling-lubricating oil outlet duct is released. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises rod sealing means which cooperate with a rod guide ring housed inside or outside the oil circulation chamber. [0019] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises mechanical transmission means which consist of a connecting rod whose one end is articulated directly or indirectly in the expansion piston and whose other end is articulates around a crank integral with the power output shaft. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises an intake metering valve and / or the exhaust valve which is guided directly or indirectly in a valve cage housed in the cylinder of the expander cylinder, said cage comprising a seat on which said valve can rest to form a seal while said seat and / or part of the valve cage which guides said valve is cooled by a valve cooling circuit in which circulates a coolant. [0020] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a piston expander which has piston sealing means. [0021] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises piston sealing means which comprise: at least one perforated continuous ring which has an internal cylindrical ring face, an outer cylindrical ring face and two axial ring faces said ring being housed in at least one ring groove formed in the piston expander while said ring can move radially in the ring groove without being able to leave the latter; Ring sealing means which provide a seal between each axial face of the ring and the ring groove, so that the ring defines with the perforated continuous ring a pressure distribution chamber connected by a ring circuit; transfer to a source of fluid under pressure; At least one calibrated orifice which passes right through the perforated continuous ring in its radial thickness; At least one air cushion lift surface provided by the perforated continuous ring, said lift surface being arranged opposite the pressure distribution chamber. [0022] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises piston sealing means which comprise at least one axially non-emerging discharge recess hollowed out on the outer cylindrical ring face, so that the surface of the outer cylindrical ring face not occupied by said obviously constitutes the air cushion lift surface. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises piston sealing means which comprise a counterpressure recess which consists of a shallow counterpressure groove more or less centered on the axial length of the face. cylindrical outer ring, said counterpressure groove being formed on the entire circumference of said outer cylindrical ring face. The heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to the present invention comprises a calibrated orifice opening into said counterpressure recess. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a calibrated orifice which opens into the counterpressure recess via a hollow pressure distribution recess at the bottom of said counterpressure recess. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a pressure distribution recess which consists of a pressure distribution groove more or less centered on the axial length of the outer cylindrical ring face, said throat pressure distribution being performed on the entire circumference of said outer cylindrical ring face. [0023] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises at least one of the two axial edges of the outer cylindrical ring face or the inner ring cylindrical face which receives the counterpressure recess which terminates. by a plating remnant. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises ring sealing means which consist of a ring sealing lip which is integral with the perforated continuous ring on the one hand, and which makes a tight contact with the inside or the rim of the ring groove on the other hand. [0024] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises ring sealing means which consist of a thin-walled axial portion arranged in the vicinity of at least one of the axial ends of the perforated continuous ring, said portion being secured to the ring groove in a sealed manner, and being sufficiently flexible to allow the diameter of the perforated continuous ring to increase or decrease relative to that of said groove. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a perforated continuous ring which is made of a flexible material and which comprises at least one circumferential ring spring which tends to reduce the diameter of said ring. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a pressure distribution chamber which houses ring fluid diffusion means which forces the ring fluid from the pressure transfer circuit to be licked the most. large possible area of the internal cylindrical ring face before escaping via the calibrated orifice. [0025] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises ring fluid diffusion means which consist of a diffusion plate housed at the bottom of the ring groove, at least one of the axial ends. said plate being provided with at least one orifice or diffusion plate lateral groove which forces the ring fluid from the pressure transfer circuit to open into the pressure distribution chamber by at least one of its ends axial. [0026] The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a ring groove which has a radial ring abutment which limits the penetration of the perforated continuous ring into said groove. [0027] The heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to the present invention comprises a pressure transfer circuit which consists of a pressure inlet tube parallel to the expander cylinder and integral with the expander piston, a first end of said tube opening to the pressure reducing valve. interior of said piston while the second end of said tube opens, via a pressure chamber bore in which it can translate longitudinally and tightly, in a pressure chamber connected to the source of pressurized fluid. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a pressure inlet tube which is connected to the pressure distribution chamber by at least one radial pressure inlet duct. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises a pressure chamber which is connected to the source of pressurized fluid via a proportional pressure check valve which allows the ring fluid to flow from said source. to said chamber, but not to go from said chamber to said source. The heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to the present invention comprises a ring groove which houses an expansion spring which bears on said groove to exert a radial force on the internal cylindrical ring face. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises an expansion spring which, by contact, forms a seal between the ring groove and the perforated continuous ring. The transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the present invention comprises an expansion spring which is provided with at least one fluid diffusion orifice and / or at least one fluid diffusion groove so as to form with said orifice and / or said groove the ring fluid diffusion means. [0028] The following description with reference to the accompanying drawings and given by way of non-limiting example will better understand the invention, the characteristics it has, and the advantages it is likely to provide: Figure 1 is a representation schematic of the thermal transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to the invention seen from above, the compressor comprising a low-pressure compressor, a high-pressure compressor and a compressor intercooler, while the heat source consists of a burner and that the piston sealing means are in particular constituted by a perforated continuous ring. FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to the invention in side view, the compressor comprising a low-pressure compressor, a high-pressure compressor and a compressor intercooler, while the heat source consists of a primary heat exchanger which extracts heat from a universal source of heat and that the piston sealing means consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring. [0029] 3 is a diagrammatic representation in side view of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention, the compressor being a single stage, with a double-acting piston, provided with metering valves for the intake of a compressor driven by a valve actuator compressor intake metering device, and cooperating with a water injector which sprays liquid water into the circulating gases in the compressor inlet duct, said water then being recovered by an air-water separator, then by a condensing gas dryer. [0030] FIGS. 4 and 5 are respectively a three-dimensional cut-away view and an exploded three-dimensional view of a portion of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when the piston sealing means consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring. , said part including in particular mechanical transmission means and an expansion cylinder defining with the expander piston with which it cooperates two transfer-expansion chambers each closed by a cylinder cylinder expander. [0031] FIG. 6 is a three-dimensional phantom view of an exhaust valve of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the invention, the seat and portion of a valve cage which guides said valve are cooled by a cooling circuit; valve. [0032] FIG. 7 is a pressure-volume diagram which schematically represents the cycle operated in the transfer-expansion chamber of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the invention. [0033] FIG. 8 is a pressure-volume diagram which schematically represents the cycle such that it can be operated in the transfer-expansion chamber of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the invention in order to maximize the torque said engine. [0034] FIG. 9 is a pressure-volume diagram which schematically represents the cycle such that it can be operated in the transfer-expansion chamber of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the invention in order to reduce the torque said engine. [0035] FIG. 10 is a pressure-volume diagram which schematically represents the cycle such that it can be operated in the transfer-expansion chamber of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the invention with the objective of maximizing the efficiency said engine by means of a fuel injector for maintaining temperature. [0036] FIG. 11 is a diagrammatic sectional view of the piston sealing means of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring, the ring sealing means being consisting of an O-ring. [0037] FIG. 12 is a diagrammatic sectional view of the piston sealing means of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring, the ring groove having a radial abutment; ring which limits the penetration of the perforated continuous ring into said groove while said ring is made of a flexible material and comprises a circumferential ring spring. [0038] FIGS. 13 and 14 are respectively a diagrammatic section and an exploded three-dimensional view of the piston sealing means of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring, the throat of ring housing an expansion spring which makes contact sealing between the ring groove and the perforated continuous ring, said spring being further provided with fluid diffusion holes to form fluid diffusion means 'ring. FIGS. 15 and 16 are respectively a diagrammatic section and an exploded three-dimensional view of the piston sealing means of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they consist in particular of a continuous ring perforated, a plate of diffusion provided with diffusion plate lateral grooves being housed at the bottom of the ring groove while a ring sealing lip integral with the perforated continuous ring constitutes the ring sealing means, and that Perforated continuous ring has edges of edge veneer. FIGS. 17 and 18 are respectively a diagrammatic section and an exploded three-dimensional view of the piston sealing means of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring, the throat of ring housing an expansion spring provided with fluid diffusion holes and fluid diffusion grooves for providing ring fluid diffusion means while the ring sealing means is comprised of axial portions de-thinning arranged near the axial ends of the perforated continuous ring. FIGS. 19 and 20 are diagrammatic sectional views which illustrate the operation of the piston sealing means of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring, the means for sealing ring consisting of an O-ring. FIG. 21 is a diagrammatic sectional view of the stem sealing means of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they apply to the pressure feed tube and which consist in particular of upper stem seal, lower stem seal, oil flow chamber, and rod guide ring. [0039] FIG. 22 is a diagrammatic sectional view of the stem sealing means of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention when they apply to the piston rod and in particular consist of upper stem seal, lower stem seal, oil flow chamber, and segment spacer spring. DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION: FIGS. 1 to 22 show the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine 1, various details of its components, its variants, and its accessories. [0040] As clearly shown in FIGS. 1 to 3, the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine 1 comprises at least one compressor 2 capable of drawing gases at a certain pressure via a compressor inlet duct 3 to discharge them to a higher pressure. in a compressor outlet duct 4, said compressor 2 can be centrifugal, rotary vane rotary, screw or lobe, or piston reciprocating (s), or any type known to those skilled in the art. Note that if the compressor 2 is reciprocating piston, its intake valve can advantageously be replaced by a metering valve of the compressor admission 66 whose opening and / or closing is (are) controlled (s) by a In this configuration, the amount of air admitted by the compressor 2 can be adjusted by said actuator 67 or during the intake stroke of said compressor 2, the closure of said metering valve 66 being more or less early, or during the compression stroke of said compressor 2 the closing of said metering valve 66 being more or less late. FIGS. 1 to 3 also show that the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine 1 according to the invention comprises at least one regeneration heat exchanger 5 consisting of at least one regeneration high-pressure line 6 and at least one a low-pressure regeneration line 7, a first end 8 that comprises said high-pressure duct 6 being connected to the compressor outlet duct 4 while the gases flowing in the low-pressure regeneration duct 7 may yield part of their heat circulating gases in the high-pressure regeneration conduit 6. It is also noted that the interior of the low-pressure regeneration conduit 7 may be coated with precious metals such as platinum, palladium or rhodium whose catalytic properties promote the oxidation of hydrocarbons that can contain the circulating gases in said low-pressure conduit 7. Said heat engine transfer-relaxation and r also includes at least one regenerator high-pressure outlet duct 9 which has a first end connected to a second end 11 which comprises the high-pressure regeneration duct 6; It will also be noted in FIGS. 1 to 3 that the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention comprises at least one heat source 12 placed at any point in the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct 9 and which can superheating gases flowing in said duct 9. FIGS. 1 to 5 also show that the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention further comprises at least one expansion cylinder 13, at least one end of which is closed by a cylinder cylinder cylinder 14 integral with said cylinder 13 or reported thereon, said cylinder 13 accommodating a piston expander 15 with which it carries a seal to form a transfer chamber-expansion 16 variable volume, said piston 25 15 being movable in said cylinder 13 and being directly or indirectly connected to a power output shaft 17 by mechanical transmission means 18, so as to print to said shaft 17 a continuous rotational movement when said piston 15 moves back and forth in the expander cylinder 13. As the case may be, the mechanical transmission means 18 can be housed in a housing motor 45 and cooperate with electrical, pneumatic or hydraulic power transmission means which can be interposed between said mechanical means 18 and the expander piston 15. By way of example, the expander piston 15 can directly actuate the piston of the engine. a hydraulic pump for providing a pressurized oil flow for use by a hydraulic motor or other hydraulic machine. [0041] It will be noted that, as a variant illustrated in FIGS. 2 to 5, the expansion cylinder 13 may define two expansion-transfer chambers 16 with the expander piston 15. According to this configuration, the two ends of the expander cylinder 13 are closed by a cylinder head of the expander cylinder 14, the one which is placed on the side of the mechanical transmission means 18 being traversed by an orifice through which passes a portion at least of said means 18 or any additional members with which said means cooperate 18. It is also noted that the expander cylinder 13, the cylinder head of the expander cylinder 14 and the expander piston 15 may be made of a material resistant to very high temperatures of the order of one thousand degrees Celsius or more, such as alumina-based ceramic, zirconia or of silicon carbide. In view of FIGS. 1 to 3, it can also be seen that the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention comprises at least one hot gas inlet duct 19 which has a first end connected to a second end 21 that comprises the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct 9, said inlet duct 19 comprising a second end 22 which passes through the expander cylinder head 14 to open into the expander cylinder 13 via a hot gas inlet duct mouth 23 FIGS. 1 to 5 show that the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention also comprises at least one intake metering valve 24 operated by a metering valve actuator 25, said valve 24 being able to close or open the hot gas intake duct mouth 23 while the metering valve actuator 25 can be controlled by a calculator which controls when the inlet metering valve 24 opens and / or closes as a function of the relative position of the expander piston 15 with respect to the expander cylinder 13 and in the direction of movement of the said piston 15, the said calculator possibly also being able to control the lift height of said valve 24. It is noted that the metering valve actuator 25 may be mechanical spring return or desmodromic, electrical, electromechanical, hydraulic, hydromechanical, pneumatic, hydropneumatic or generally, of any type known to the man of art. [0042] In FIGS. 1 to 5, it can also be seen that the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention also comprises at least one expanded gas exhaust duct 26 which comprises a first end 27 which passes through the regulator cylinder head. 14 to open into the expansion cylinder 13 via an exhaust gas outlet pipe 28, said exhaust pipe 26 also comprising a second end 29 connected to a first end 30 that comprises the low-pressure regeneration pipe 7. It is in FIGS. 1 to 6 that it is found that the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention comprises at least one exhaust valve 31 operated by an exhaust valve actuator 32, valve 31 can close or open the exhaust gas exhaust pipe mouth 28 while the exhaust valve actuator 32 can be controlled by a computer which controls the moment when the exhaust valve 31 opens and / or closes as a function of the relative position of the expansion piston 15 with respect to the expander cylinder 13 and in the direction of movement of said piston 15, said calculator being able to also possibly control the lift height of said valve 31. It is noted that the exhaust valve actuator 32 may be mechanical return spring or desmodromic, electrical, electromechanical, hydraulic, hydromechanical, pneumatic, hydropneumatic or generally, of any type known to those skilled in the art. Note that according to the embodiment chosen for the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention, the metering valve 24 and / or the exhaust valve 31 may be full or hollow. In the latter case, said valve 24, 31 may or may not contain a liquid or heat-transfer salts. Said valve 24, 31 may also be made of one or more pieces of steel regardless of the grade and / or ceramic armed or not. If said valve 24, 31 is hollow, it may be designed as light as possible, that is to say made of a thickness of steel to the limits of the admissible by the rigidity and longevity of said valve 24, 31. Finally, as can be seen in FIGS. 1 to 3, the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention comprises at least one motor output duct 33 placed in the extension of a second end 34 that comprises the low-pressure regeneration pipe 7, or coincides with said second end 34 to constitute with the latter one and the same piece. Note that if the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine 1 according to the invention comprises at least one reciprocating compressor 2 piston (s), the cylinder (s) expander (s) 13 and said compressor 2 that includes said motor 1 can be connected to the same power output shaft 17 and be disposed around it in line, in "V", flat, star or any architecture applicable to conventional reciprocating engines or reciprocating compressors, so as to optimize the size, the proportions or the vibration emissions of said transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1. As illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 2, the compressor 2 of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention can be two-stage and consist of a low-pressure compressor 35 whose output is connected to the inlet of a high-pressure compressor 36 via a compressor cooler 37 known e The coolant that cools the gases leaving the low pressure compressor 35 dissipates heat into the atmosphere or any other cooler medium than said gases and before they are admitted to the inlet of the high pressure compressor. 36. It is noted in this respect that if the low-pressure compressor 35 is reciprocating piston, its cylinder at least can be cooled by air for water. FIGS. 1 to 3 also show that the power output shaft 17 can - according to a particular embodiment of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention - drive the compressor 2 in rotation. can occur directly or through a multi-gear or continuously variable transmission. [0043] As shown in FIG. 3, the compressor inlet duct 3 may comprise a water injector 56 which can spray liquid water 57 into the gases circulating in said duct 3 before said gases are introduced into a chamber suction-discharge 58 that defines the compressor 2 which sucks, the water injector 56 can be of any type known to those skilled in the art and can be supplied with liquid water 57 by a water pump 62 or any other liquid such as oil or other hydrocarbons by a liquid pump of any type. [0044] As another variant, it is noted that the compressor 2 can define a suction-discharge chamber 58 into which a water injector 56 opens, the latter being able to spray liquid water 57 into the gases introduced into said chamber 58 after said gases have been sucked via the compressor inlet duct 3 by said compressor 2. It will be noted that the water injector 56 may be of any type known to those skilled in the art and that can be supplied with liquid water 57 by a water pump 62 or any other liquid such as oil or other hydrocarbons by a liquid pump of any type. [0045] Insofar as a water injector 56 is provided, FIG. 3 shows that the compressor outlet duct 4 may comprise an air-water separator 59 which recovers liquid water 57 present in the gases which have been discharged by the compressor 2 in said outlet duct 4, and which stores said water 57 in a liquid water recovery tank 61. It is noted that the air-water separator 59 may for example be centrifugal or cyclonic type, or any other type known to those skilled in the art. According to another variant of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention, which is still shown in FIG. 3, the motor output duct 33 may comprise a condensing gas dryer 60 in which the gases leaving the low-pressure duct pass. regeneration pressure 7, said dryer 60 having internal walls maintained at relatively low temperature by any possible cold source so that when said gases lick said walls they cool, a large part of the vapor contained in said gas condensing then to converting into liquid water 57 which flows along said walls to be recovered in a condensate pan 63. Note that if the cold source is atmospheric air, the condensing gas dryer 60 may consist mainly of a heat exchanger air / condensation air 64 which integrates the condensate pan 63 or which is connected thereto, while said air ambient can be forced through said heat exchanger 64 by a condenser heat exchanger fan 65. [0046] FIG. 3 also illustrates that the compressor 2 may comprise a compressor intake metering valve 66 whose opening and closing are controlled by a compressor intake metering valve actuator 67, said valve 66 being able to open connecting the compressor inlet duct 3 with a suction-discharge chamber 58 defined by the compressor 2. [0047] According to this particular configuration of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention, the compressor intake metering valve actuator 67 can adjust the amount of air admitted by the compressor 2 during the intake stroke. said compressor 2 the closing of the metering valve of compressor intake 66 being more or less early, either during the compression stroke of said compressor 2 the closing of said metering valve 66 being more or less late. As a variant represented in FIGS. 1 to 3, the high-pressure regeneration duct 6 and the low-pressure regeneration duct 7 may be placed side by side over all or part of their length, the direction of the circulation of the gases contained in the high-pressure regeneration pipe 6 being reversed in the direction of the circulation of the gases contained in the low-pressure regeneration pipe 7, the two said ducts 6, 7 constituting a known countercurrent heat exchanger 41 in itself, which may consist of tubes, stacked sheets or any other arrangement known to those skilled in the art and applicable to this type of exchanger. It is also noted in Figures 1 and 3 that the heat source 12 may be a burner 38 consisting of a fuel injector 39 and a combustion chamber 40, said fuel may be liquid or gaseous and the combustion chamber may be of any type known to those skilled in the art. FIG. 2 shows a variant according to which the heat source 12 may consist of a primary heat exchanger 46 which extracts heat from a universal source of heat 47 to transmit said heat to the gases flowing in the high outlet duct regenerator pressure 9 directly, or via a secondary heat transport circuit 48, the universal heat source 47 may result - by way of non-limiting example - from the combustion of hydrocarbons of fossil or renewable origin, or hydrogen combustion, or a nuclear reaction. [0048] It will be noted that the secondary heat transport circuit 48 can convey heat via a heat transfer fluid that can be of any kind, including molten salts or liquid metals. It is noted that advantageously, at least part of the primary heat exchanger 46 can be against the current. [0049] Note also that if the transfer-expansion and regenerative heat engine 1 comprises a primary heat exchanger 46, it can operate in a closed circuit. In this case, the gases expelled by the motor output conduit 33 are cooled in an exchanger via which they give up a large part of their heat to a cold source of any kind whatsoever, before being sucked up again by the compressor 2. This configuration preferably for stationary applications avoids in particular any fouling of the regeneration heat exchanger so that the latter keeps lasting highest efficiency possible. Said configuration also makes it possible to opt for non-oxidizing and chemically stable neutral gases such as nitrogen or carbon dioxide, or for gases whose physical characteristics are potentially more favorable than atmospheric air to the efficiency of the combustion engine. transfer-relaxation and regeneration 1 according to the invention. [0050] FIG. 1 shows that the cylinder cylinder of expander 14 may comprise a pressure equalizing valve 49 which closes or not a duct connecting the transfer-expansion chamber 16 and the hot gas intake duct 19, said valve 49 being open if the pressure prevailing in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 is greater than that prevailing in the hot gas inlet duct 19 so that the gases pass from said chamber 16 to said duct 19, said valve 49 being otherwise closed so that said gases can not pass from said duct 19 to said chamber 16 via said valve 49. Note in Figure 3 that the transfer-expansion chamber 16 may comprise at least one temperature holding fuel injector 140 which can inject into said chamber 16 a liquid fuel, gaseous or solid previously pulverized and this, in order to temporarily raise the temperature of the hot gases admitted into said chamber 16 by the valve intake metering device 24 at the time of admission of said gases into said chamber 16. [0051] As a result of this first strategy, the efficiency of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention is increased. [0052] Alternatively or in addition to said first strategy, the temperature holding fuel injector 140 may inject fuel into the transfer-expansion chamber 16 after the intake metering device 24 has been closed to compensate in whole or in part for the lowering the temperature of said gases during all or part of their relaxation. As a result of this second strategy, said gases retain their initial relaxation temperature approximately during all or part of their expansion, which increases the efficiency of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1. the transfer-expansion chamber 16 may comprise at least one anti-NOx water injector 141 which can inject into said chamber 16 a cooling liquid - for example water - in order to maintain the maximum temperature of the hot gases contained in said chamber 16 below a certain threshold, in particular during the re-compression of said gases at the end of the exhaust stroke. This brief injection of coolant makes it possible to reduce the quantity of pollutants and in particular of nitrogen oxides produced by the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention. FIGS. 2 to 5 show that the expander piston 15 can be connected to the mechanical transmission means 18 by a piston rod 68 that passes through the expander cylinder head 14, a seal being formed between the said rod 68 and the said cylinder head 14 by shank sealing means 69 which may consist of at least one seal, segment, ring or other sealing means known to those skilled in the art. FIG. 22 illustrates that the shaft seal means 69 may include a top shaft seal 70 and a lower shaft seal 71 sufficiently remote from each other to form between the two said seals 70, 71 - an oil-flow chamber 72 into which a cooling-lubricating oil supply duct 73 opens and from which a cooling-lubricating oil outlet duct 74 leaves. [0053] Thus constituted, the rod sealing means 69 allow oil circulating between the cooling oil-lubricating supply line 73 and the cooling-lubricating oil outlet duct 74 via the flow chamber. oil 72 to ensure on the one hand, the lubrication between the piston rod expander 68 and the two said seals 70, 71 and on the other hand, the cooling of the piston rod expander 68. Note that the Upper rod seal 70 and / or the lower stem seal 71 may in particular consist of a section segment or two segments with superimposed sections and whose sections are angularly offset while the outer surface of the piston rod expander 68 may be provided with shallow double helix stripes which form a succession of oil tanks and hydrodynamic lift surfaces. [0054] In FIG. 22, it can be seen that the segments constituting the upper rod seal 70 can be kept at a distance from those constituting the lower rod seal 71 by a segment spacer spring 75 also designed - in particular because it comprises orifices - to pass the flow of cooling and lubricating oil established between the cooling oil-lubricating supply line 73 and the cooling-lubricating oil outlet duct 74. - As illustrated in Figure 21 - the rod sealing means 69 can also be applied to the pressure supply tube 128 so as to seal between the latter and the cylinder cylinder 14 or the bore cylinder pressure chamber 130 through which said tube 128 passes, in addition to cooling said tube 128. FIG. 21 makes it possible to specify that the rod sealing means 69 can coo with a rod guide ring 76 housed inside or outside the oil flow chamber 72, said ring 76 being made of bronze or of any other material usually used to manufacture bearings or rings antifriction and / / or hydrodynamic, and said ring 76 providing radial guidance of the expander piston rod 68 in the cylinder head of the expander cylinder 14. [0055] It should also be noted that the rod sealing means 69 are preferably provided with a rod guide ring 76 when they apply to the pressure feed tube 128 while the radial guide of the piston rod Expander 68 may be indirectly provided by the butt 44. In FIGS. 2 to 5, it should be noted that the mechanical transmission means 18 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention may consist of a connecting rod 42 whose one of the ends is articulated directly or indirectly in the expander piston 15 and whose other end is articulated around a crank 43 integral with the power output shaft 17. [0056] Note that if the expansion cylinder 13 defines with the expansion piston 15 two transfer-expansion chambers 16, the connecting rod can be articulated in the piston expander 15 via a butt 44 integral with said piston 15 and be guided in translation with respect to the motor housing 45. The stock 44 may then be a cylindrical guide piston sliding in a guide cylinder, or be of any shape that cooperates with rails or guides arranged in or on the motor housing 45. FIG. 6 illustrates that the intake metering valve 24 and / or the exhaust valve 31 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention can be guided directly or indirectly in a valve housing 50 housed in the cylinder cylinder cylinder 14, said cage 50 having a seat on which said valve 24, 31 can seat to form a seal while said seat and / or part of the Valve 50 which guides said valve 24, 31 is cooled by a valve cooling circuit 51 in which circulates a coolant. It will be noted in FIG. 6 that said valve 24, 31, valve cage 50 and metering valve actuator 25 or exhaust valve actuator 32 may constitute a ready-to-assemble cartridge 52 which fits in the cylinder cylinder cylinder 14. [0057] FIG. 5 and FIGS. 11 to 20 show that, in general, the expansion piston 15 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention may comprise piston sealing means 53 which make between said piston 15 and the pressure reducing cylinder 13 a seal as perfect as possible and which may consist of at least one segment and / or a sealing ring, regardless of the material and the geometry of said segment and / or said ring . [0058] More particularly, FIG. 5 and FIGS. 11 to 20 show that the piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention may comprise at least one perforated continuous ring 105 which includes a internal cylindrical ring face 106, an outer cylindrical ring face 107 and two axial ring faces 108, said ring 105 being housed in at least one ring groove 109 formed in the expansion piston 15 whereas said ring 105 can move radially in the ring groove 109 without being able to leave the latter. It should also be noted that the ring groove 109 can directly or indirectly hold the perforated continuous ring 105 axially integral with the expander piston 15. In this case, the piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion heat engine and regeneration 1 according to the invention comprise ring sealing means 110 which provide a seal between each axial face of the ring 108 and the ring groove 109, so that the latter defines with the perforated continuous ring 105 a pressure distribution chamber 119. It is noted that the ring sealing means 110 may consist of an O-ring 132, a lip seal, a composite seal, or any seal or segment of sealing known in itself regardless of the material or geometry. It should also be noted that the inner cylindrical ring face 106 or the outer ring cylindrical face 107 which faces the ring groove 109 may be a non-cylindrical revolution form so that all variations of thickness of the perforated continuous ring 105 is possible over its axial length, said ring 105 can be either a simple circular sheet deformed by rolling or stamping, or a piece made by rolling, by any cutting or grinding tool, or by any other electrochemical manufacturing process or other known to those skilled in the art. Still in the configuration of the piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine 1 according to the invention shown in FIG. 5 and in FIGS. 11 to 20 and based on at least one perforated continuous ring 105, at least one calibrated orifice 111 passes right through the perforated continuous ring 105 in its radial thickness, the first end of said orifice 111 opening on the inner cylindrical ring face 106 while the second end of said orifice 111 opens on the outer cylindrical face of ring 107. [0059] Said piston sealing means 53 also comprise at least one source of pressurized fluid 112 from which a pressurized ring fluid 113 exits, the outlet of said fluid source 112 being connected to the pressure distribution chamber. 119 by a pressure transfer circuit 114 so that the ring fluid 113 exerts a pressure on the internal cylindrical ring face 106. It is noted that the pressure to which the ring fluid 113 is subjected is always greater than In consequence of the foregoing, the diameter of the perforated continuous ring 105 increases under the effect of the pressure of the ring fluid 113 due to the elasticity of said ring 105. so that the outer cylindrical ring face 107 tends to approach the expander cylinder 13. It is also noted that the diameter of the calibrated orifice 111 is calculated so that, taking into account the flow of ring fluid 113 from of the pressurized fluid source 112, the pressure exerted by said ring fluid 113 on the internal cylindrical ring face 106 always remains greater than that prevailing in the transfer-expansion chamber 16. It is noted that the source of pressurized fluid 112 may be a pneumatic fluid compressor 120 piston, vane, screw, centrifugal or any type known to those skilled in the art or any other type known per se. The pneumatic fluid compressor 120 may or may not cooperate with a pressure accumulator known per se. Note that a fine mesh ring fluid filter 138 may be mounted upstream or downstream of the pneumatic fluid compressor 120 so as to rid the ring fluid 113 of any particle exceeding a certain size before said fluid 113 is introduced into the pressure distribution chamber 119. The piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine 1 according to the invention shown in FIG. 5 and in FIGS. 11 to 20 being based on at least a perforated continuous ring 105, said means 53 comprise at least one counterpressure recess 115 axially non-opening and recessed on the outer cylindrical ring face 107, the calibrated orifice 111 opening into said counterpressure recess 115 while the The surface of the outer cylindrical ring face 107 not occupied by said recess 115 constitutes an air cushion bearing surface 116. [0060] Note that the extent of the counterpressure recess 115 may be of any size since the smallest, ie equivalent to the non-zero radius of the outlet of the calibrated orifice 111, the largest is to say just substantially less than that of the outer cylindrical ring face 107 which receives said recess 115. It is specified that the piston expander 15 may include in the vicinity of the ring groove 109 a decompression groove or grooves or any another internal or surface channel of any type which connects said vicinity with the transfer-expansion chamber 16. FIGS. 11 to 20 show that the piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine 1 according to the invention can be provided with the counterpressure recess 115 which consists of a counterpressure groove 117 of shallow depth more or less centered on the axial length of the outer cylindrical face ring 107, said counterpressure groove 117 being formed over the entire circumference of said outer cylindrical ring face 107, the annular surfaces which border said counterpressure groove 117 each constituting an air cushion lift surface 116. FIGS. 13 to 20 show that the calibrated orifice 111 may open into the counterpressure recess 115 via a pressure distribution recess 125 formed in a recess at the bottom of said counterpressure recess 115. In the same figures 13 to 20, it can be seen that the pressure distribution recess 125 may consist of a pressure distribution groove 126 more or less centered on the axial length of the outer cylindrical ring face 107, said distribution groove pressure 126 being formed on the entire circumference of said outer cylindrical ring face 107. Figures 15 and 16 show that at least one of the two axial edges of the fac The outer cylindrical ring member 107 or inner ring cylindrical face 106 which receives the counterpressure recess 115 may terminate with an edge plating recess 118 which allows the ring fluid pressure 113 contained in the pressure distribution chamber 119 exert a locally higher stress on the air cushion bearing surface 116 adjacent to said edge plating 118. [0061] In FIGS. 15 and 16, it can also be seen that the ring sealing means 110 may consist of a ring sealing lip 121 which is integral with the perforated continuous ring 105 on the one hand, and which establishes a sealing contact with the inside or the rim of the ring groove 109 on the other hand, said sealing lip 121 being mountable on the perforated continuous ring 105 or can be made in the same piece of material said ring 105. Note that alternatively, the ring sealing lip 121 may be integral with the ring groove 109 on the one hand, and establish a sealing contact with the perforated continuous ring 105 of somewhere else. In this case, said lip 121 may be mounted mounted in the ring groove 109 or on the rim of the latter, or may be made in the same piece of material as said groove 109. [0062] As a variant of the piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention shown in FIGS. 17 and 18, the ring sealing means 110 may consist of an axial portion. thinning 139 arranged in the vicinity of at least one of the axial ends of the perforated continuous ring 105, said portion 139 being integral with the ring groove 109 sealingly, and being flexible enough to allow the diameter of the ring Continuous perforated 105 to increase or decrease relative to that of said groove 109. Note that the axial thin portion 139 is designed such that the material that constitutes it is in no way likely to give way under that is effect of the ring fluid pressure 113, or because of a repeated stress incompatible with the fatigue strength limits of said material. FIG. 12 shows that the perforated continuous ring 105 may consist of a flexible material and comprise at least one circumferential ring spring 123 which tends to reduce the diameter of said ring 105. It is noted that said flexible material can be an elastomer or a polymer loaded or not with anti-abrasive or anti-friction particles while the circumferential ring spring 123 may be included in said material or maintained on the surface of the latter by means of a groove, a housing or stops. The circumferential ring spring 123 may be helical like the valve stem seal springs, be a split ring or be of any other type enabling it to perform the desired function. [0063] The variants illustrated in FIGS. 13 to 18 of the piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention show that the pressure distribution chamber 119 can accommodate ring fluid diffusion means. 124 which force the ring fluid 113 from the pressure transfer circuit 114 to lick the largest possible area of the ring inner cylindrical face 106 before escaping via the calibrated orifice 111. This arrangement allows the ring fluid 113 to cool the perforated continuous ring 105 the latter yielding to said fluid 113 part of its heat. As shown in FIGS. 15 and 16, the ring fluid diffusion means 124 may consist of a diffusion plate 136 housed at the bottom of the ring groove 106, at least one of the axial ends of said ring groove. plate 136 being provided with at least one orifice or diffusion plate side groove 137 which forces the ring fluid 113 from the pressure transfer circuit 114 to open into the pressure distribution chamber 119 by at least one of its axial ends. [0064] FIG. 12 shows that the ring groove 109 may have a radial ring abutment 127 which limits the penetration of the perforated continuous ring 105 into said groove 109, said abutment 127 being able to be - in a non-limiting manner - a cylindrical surface constituting the bottom of the ring groove 109, or at least one circular edge or pads arranged at the bottom of said groove 109, or at least one chamfer or flange arranged on at least one of the two edges of said groove 109. FIGS. 4 and 5 show that the pressure transfer circuit 114 may consist of a pressure inlet tube 128 parallel to the expander cylinder 13 and integral with the expander piston 15, a first end of said tube 128 opening to the inside said piston 15 while the second end of said tube 128 opens, via a pressure chamber bore 130 in which it can translate longitudinally and tightly, in a pressure chamber 129 connected the source of pressurized fluid 112. It is noted that the second end of the pressure inlet tube 128 which translates into the pressure chamber bore 130 may comprise a seal which slides in said bore 130 to achieve a seal . Alternatively, the pressure chamber bore 130 may include a seal that slides around said second end of the pressure inlet tube 128 to provide a seal. [0065] It should be noted, however, that, like the piston rod 68 that passes through the expander cylinder head 14, a tube seal can, as shown in FIG. 21, be formed between the pressure inlet tube 128 and the pressure chamber bore 130 which comprises an upper shaft seal 70 and a lower shaft seal 71 sufficiently spaced from each other to form - between the two said seals 70, 71 - a flow chamber of oil 72 in which opens a supply duct for cooling-lubricating oil 73 and from which leaves a cooling-lubricating oil outlet duct 74. The tube seal thus formed allows oil circulating between the cooling-lubricating oil supply duct 73 and the cooling-lubricating oil outlet duct 74 via the oil circulation chamber 72 to ensure, on the one hand, the lubrication between the 128 and the two said seals 70, 71 and secondly, the cooling of the pressure inlet tube 128. In Figure 4, we see that the pressure inlet tube 128 can be connected to the pressure distribution chamber 119 by at least one radial pressure inlet duct 131 which can be made in the mass of the expansion piston 15 or which can be attached thereto for example by assembling tubes with or without seals sealing and / or expansion. [0066] Note that the pressure chamber 129 can be connected to the source of pressurized fluid 112 via a proportional pressure check valve which allows the ring fluid 113 to flow from said source 112 to said chamber 129, but not to go from said chamber 129 to said source 112. This particular arrangement makes it possible to use the variation of the volume of the pressure chamber 129 produced by the back and forth movements of the second end of the pressure inlet tube 128 to increase the pressure in the pressure distribution chamber 119 when the piston expander 151 is in the vicinity of its top dead center. [0067] FIGS. 13, 14, 17 and 18 show that the ring groove 109 can accommodate an expansion spring 133 which bears on said groove 109 to exert a radial force on the internal cylindrical ring face 106, said spring 133 may be helical, blade, corrugated or type known to those skilled in the art. In FIGS. 13 and 14, it can be seen that the expansion spring 133 can make a contact between the ring groove 109 and the perforated continuous ring 105. FIGS. 13, 14, 17 and 18 further show that the expansion spring 133 may be provided with at least one fluid diffusion orifice 134 and / or at least one fluid diffusion groove 135 so as to constitute, with said orifice 134 and / or said groove 135, the means of the ring fluid 124. FUNCTIONING OF THE INVENTION: The operation of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention is easily understood in the light of FIGS. 1 to 22. To detail said operation, we will retain here the exemplary embodiment of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to the invention as schematically illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 2. Said exemplary embodiment provides a two-stage piston compressor consisting of a compressor low-pressure 35 and a high-pressure compressor 36, the output of the low-pressure compressor being connected to the inlet of the high-pressure compressor via a compressor cooler 37. Figures 1 and 2 differing mainly from the one of the other by the heat source 12, to explain the operation of the present invention we will retain the heat source 12 shown in Figure 1 which provides a burner 38 whose fuel injector 39 feeds a combustion chamber 40. According to the exemplary embodiment of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, the low-pressure compressor 35 and the high-pressure compressor 36 are driven by the same power output shaft. 17 which takes the form of a crankshaft, while the mechanical transmission means 18 between the expansion piston 15 and said shaft 17 consist of a connecting rod 42, one of which ends articulates in the piston expander 15 through a butt 44 integral with said piston 15 and whose other end is articulated around a crank 43 integral with the power output shaft 17. [0068] It will be noted that the low-pressure compressor 35 and the high-pressure compressor 36 are connected to the power output shaft 17 by similar means. [0069] It can also be seen in FIG. 2 that the intake metering valve 24 opens the mouth of the hot gas inlet duct 23 which it closes away from the expander cylinder 13 while the exhaust valve 31 opens the mouth of the exhaust duct of the expanded gas 28 that it closes approaching said cylinder 13, the seats of said valves 24, 31 being respectively oriented outwardly and inwardly of said cylinder 13. The explanation of the operation of the engine transfer-expansion and regeneration 1 according to the invention will also refer to FIGS. 4 and 5 which show in three dimensions the expander cylinder 13 and the various members with which it co-operates, the same said cylinder 13 being shown schematically in FIGS. 1 and 2 This exposed, the thermal engine transfer-relaxation and regeneration 1 according to the invention operates - according to a non-limiting embodiment - as follows a Once started and once its operation stabilized: the low-pressure compressor 35 draws atmospheric air via the inlet duct of compressor 3. The temperature and the pressure of said air being respectively twenty degrees Celsius and one absolute bar. The low-pressure compressor 35 then represses said air at a pressure of 10 bar and at a temperature of the order of two hundred ninety-five degrees Celsius. Before reaching the inlet of the high-pressure compressor 36, said air is cooled in the compressor intercooler 37 so that the temperature of said air falls again to around 20 degrees Celsius, its pressure remaining unchanged at 10 bars. This intermediate cooling improves the volumetric efficiency of the high-pressure compressor 36 and decreases the working puncture that said compressor 36 operates on the power output shaft 17. The high-pressure compressor 36 which receives said air sucks the latter and supercharged to push it back into the compressor outlet duct 4 at a pressure of twenty bars and a temperature of the order of eighty five degrees Celsius. [0070] The air is then conveyed by the compressor outlet duct 4 into the high-pressure regeneration duct 6 where it receives heat from the low-pressure regeneration duct 7. The heat transfer between the low-pressure regeneration duct 7 and the high-pressure regeneration pipe 6 operates in the regeneration heat exchanger 5 which in this case is a countercurrent heat exchanger 41 whose performance is particularly high. The gases emerge from the high-pressure regeneration pipe 6 still at 20 bar but at a temperature close to three hundred degrees Celsius while those emerging from the low-pressure regeneration pipe 7 have been brought to a pressure of one bar and a pressure of temperature of the order of ninety degrees Celsius. [0071] Once exiting the high-pressure regeneration pipe 6, the gases at three hundred degrees Celsius enter the high-pressure regenerator outlet pipe 9 and then pass into the combustion chamber 40 of the burner 38 where their temperature rises to eleven hundred degrees Celsius following the combustion of the fuel injected into said chamber 40 by the fuel injector 39. The pressure of said gas is always twenty bars. The gases then leave the high-pressure regenerator outlet duct 9 to enter the hot gas inlet duct 19 which will convey them to the expander cylinder 13 to be admitted thereafter at a temperature of eleven hundred degrees Celsius. and always at a pressure of twenty bars. At this stage of the explanation of the operation of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention, we will describe only what happens in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 located above the expansion valve piston 15 such that represented in FIG. 2 and in FIGS. 4 and 5, knowing that the transfer-expansion chamber 16 located below said piston 15 operates in a strictly identical manner. As the regulator piston 15 is at the bottom dead center, it rises to its top dead center while expelling into the exhaust duct exhaust gases 26 the hot gases which it has previously released from twenty bars and eleven hundred degrees Celsius up to at a bar and three hundred and ten degrees Celsius. [0072] When the expansion piston 15 reaches the vicinity of its top dead center, the exhaust valve 31 closes and traps a certain amount of residual exhaust gas in the transfer-expansion chamber 16. The moment of closure of said valve 31 is calculated so that the pressure and the temperature of said gases rises respectively to twenty bars and eleven hundred degrees Celsius when the piston expander 15 reaches its top dead center. Said moment therefore depends mainly on the dead volume remaining above the piston expander 15 when it reaches said top dead center. [0073] Thus, when the expansion piston 15 reaches its top dead point, the pressure and the temperature of the gases trapped in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 are identical to those of the gases contained in the hot gas intake duct 19. This is at this precise moment that the intake metering valve 24 opens and connects said duct 19 with said chamber 16. To avoid any overpressure in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 following an imperfect synchronization of the metering valve of admission 24 it is noted that the cylinder cylinder cylinder 14 of the regenerative transfer-regeneration engine 1 according to the invention may, in the variant shown in Figure 1, comprise a pressure equalizing valve 49 which opens as soon as the pressure prevailing in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 is greater than that prevailing in the inlet duct for the hot gases 19. The regulator piston 15 being at the top dead center, the intake metering valve 24 being open and the pressure and the gas temperature being identical on both sides of the hot gas inlet pipe mouth 23, the piston expander 15 begins its descent to its bottom dead center. In doing so, the gases at eleven hundred degrees Celsius and twenty bars contained in the hot gas inlet duct 19 penetrate into the transfer-expansion chamber 16 while the piston expander 15 produces a first work on the output shaft of When a certain amount of said gas has been transferred into the transfer-expansion chamber 16, the metering valve 24 closes and the expansion of said gas starts so that the piston expander 15 produces a second work on the power output shaft 17. Said certain amount is provided so that when the piston expander 15 arrives at its bottom dead point, the pressure of said gas is substantially equivalent to the atmospheric pressure of an absolute bar while the temperature of said gas is the order of three hundred and ten degrees Celsius. Once the regulator piston 15 has reached the bottom dead center, it rises again towards its top dead center while expelling the hot gases through the exhaust pipe mouth of the expanded gases 28, said gases having been previously relaxed by said piston 15 from twenty bars and eleven hundred degrees Celsius to a bar and three hundred and ten degrees Celsius. This marks the beginning of a new cycle. [0074] The pressure-volume diagram of FIG. 7 illustrates the course of the cycle operated in the transfer-expansion chamber 16. It is noted in said FIG. 7 that - as is the case with regard to FIGS. 8, 9 and 10 - the bottom dead center of the piston regulator 15 is noted "PMB" while the top dead center of said piston 15 is noted "PMH". According to the example taken in FIG. 7 to explain the operation of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention, the stroke AB operated by the expander piston 15 is effected while the pressure of the gases contained in the combustion chamber 16 is a bar and the temperature of said gas is three hundred and ten degrees Celsius. During the stroke BC, the expansion piston 15 compresses the residual exhaust gases trapped in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 by the exhaust valve 31 so that the pressure and the temperature of said gases are respectively 20 bar and 11 one hundred degrees Celsius. The stroke CD corresponds to the transfer into the transfer-expansion chamber 16 of the gases at eleven hundred degrees Celsius and twenty bars contained in the inlet duct of the hot gases 19 while the piston expander 15 produces a first work on the shaft The stroke DA corresponds to the expansion of the gases previously transferred into the transfer-expansion chamber 16 and whose quantity is regulated by the metering valve 24 so that when the piston expander 15 arrives at its bottom dead center, the pressure of said gas is substantially equivalent to the atmospheric pressure of an absolute bar. The expansion of said gases allows the piston expander 15 to produce a second work on the power output shaft 17. The pressure-volume diagram of Figure 8 illustrates a different control strategy of the metering valve 24 , said strategy being provided to maximize the specific torque of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention and therefore to maximize the specific power of said engine 1 to iso regime. [0075] In the diagram shown in FIG. 8, it will be noted that with respect to the diagram of FIG. 7, the closing moment "D" of the intake metering valve 24 has been delayed at the point marked "D". Thus, more gases at eleven hundred degrees Celsius and twenty bars are decanted from the hot gas inlet duct 19 to the transfer-expansion chamber 16. [0076] This excess gas being admitted, the stroke A of the expansion piston 15 becomes insufficient to relax said gas to an absolute bar. Accordingly, when the exhaust valve 31 opens, the pressure of the gases is still for example three bars while their temperature is still five hundred twenty degrees Celsius. On the other hand, the working area of the gases is significantly increased, although at the cost of a significant drop in efficiency of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention. It can be seen in FIG. 8 that the strokes AB and BC remain unchanged with respect to those corresponding to those shown in FIG. 7. It is also noted that, at the opening of the exhaust valve 31, the additional temperature of the gases which results from the The truncation of the expansion as provided in FIG. 8 is mainly recycled by the regeneration heat exchanger 5 to preheat the gases received from the high-pressure compressor 36. As a consequence, said increase minores all the heat that the burner 38 has to produce. to raise the temperature of the gases that will intervene in the following cycles at eleven hundred degrees Celsius. [0077] The motive power not recovered after said truncation is lost. [0078] The pressure-volume diagram of FIG. 9 illustrates another variant of control of the intake metering valve 24 and of the exhaust valve 31. Said variant is this time intended to reduce the specific torque of the transfer heat engine. -détente and regeneration 1 according to the invention and therefore to reduce the specific power of said engine 1 at the same regime. Downsetting the power of said engine 1 may be useful in many contexts of use. In said diagram of Figure 9, we note that compared to the diagram of Figure 7, the closing time "D" of the metering valve 24 has been advanced to the point marked "D". Thus, less gas at eleven hundred degrees Celsius and twenty bars are transferred from the hot gas inlet duct 19 to the transfer-expansion chamber 16. [0079] As a result of this gas deficit, the expansion piston 15 expands the gases to its bottom dead center marked "PMB" to a pressure of less than one absolute bar. Also, the strategy shown in Figure 9 provides that the piston expander 15 re-com Prime gas until the pressure of the latter is an absolute bar and of the order of three hundred and ten degrees Celsius. This expansion followed by a re-compression is denoted "DC" in FIG. 9. The re-compression of the gases ends when the exhaust valve 31 opens at the point marked "A" which is strongly retarded relative to at point "A" noted in the same figure 9 as a reminder of the opening moment of said valve 31 as shown in FIG. [0080] As noted in FIG. 9, the gas working area was significantly reduced compared to that shown in FIG. 7 without penalty for the indicated efficiency of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention. [0081] Note that to effectively serve the strategy illustrated in Figure 9, the compressor 2 must suck less atmospheric air via the compressor inlet duct 3. For this, as shown in Figure 3, said compressor 2 may comprise a metering valve compressor inlet 66 whose opening and closing are controlled by a compressor intake metering valve actuator 67 so as to admit more or less atmospheric air. [0082] As an alternative illustrated in FIG. 1, a throttle valve of the intake air 142 may be provided on the compressor inlet duct 3 to regulate the intake pressure of the compressor 2. [0083] Another strategy illustrated in FIG. 10 consists in limiting or even canceling the drop in the temperature of the gases during their expansion so as to maximize the efficiency of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1. Said strategy requires the use of a fuel injector 140, whose nose opens into the transfer-expansion chamber 16. As can be seen, the working area of the gases of said FIG. 10 is comparable on the surface with that of FIG. also as compared with the diagram of FIG. 7, the closing moment "D" of the intake metering valve 24 has been advanced to the point marked "D". This implies that less work is consumed by the compressor 2 to achieve a comparable work area produced by the piston regulator 15. It is found that this strategy can be applied without having to increase the maximum temperature of the gases which remains eleven hundred degrees Celsius. To achieve this result, once the intake metering valve 24 is closed at the point marked "D", the temperature holding fuel injector 140 injects fuel into the hot gases during their expansion, said fuel igniting instantly. in contact with said hot gases, the latter being furthermore rich in oxygen. The flow rate said fuel is for example calculated so that the temperature of said gas remains in the vicinity of eleven hundred degrees Celsius despite the relaxation of said gases throughout the duration of the injection noted "DI" in Figure 10. The end of injection noted "FI" in FIG. 10 is calculated so that the temperature of the gases at the end of expansion remains acceptable - for example, six hundred degrees Celsius - taking into account the thermomechanical resistance of the regeneration heat exchanger intended to receive said gases. It should be noted that the strategy illustrated in FIG. 10 necessarily carries the temperature of the gases at the end of the stroke BC to more than eleven hundred degrees Celsius. Taking this into account and to prevent the excessive formation of nitrogen oxides, the transfer-expansion chamber 16 may comprise - in addition to the temperature maintenance fuel injector 140 - an anti-NOx water injector 141 which can inject water into said chamber 16 to maintain the temperature of the hot gases contained in said chamber 16 below the threshold of massive formation of nitrogen oxides. Note that since the temperature above eleven hundred degrees Celsius is found at the end of the stroke BC for a very short duration, said temperature has no significant impact on the thermomechanical behavior of the regulator cylinder 13, the cylinder heads As can easily be conceived, another way of using the fuel injector for keeping the temperature 140 is to raise temporarily the temperature of the hot gases admitted to the transfer chamber. trigger 16 by the intake metering valve 24 at the time of admission of said gases in said chamber 16. In Figure 7, this would result in a fuel injection operating during the race CD. The result of this strategy is an increase in the efficiency of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention without jeopardizing the thermomechanical behavior of its main components, with however the counterpart of an exhaust gas production whose Nitrogen oxide content is potentially high. In this case, the expanded gas exhaust duct 26 may for example comprise a catalyst for post-treatment of nitrogen oxides with unrepresented urea, the latter advantageously having a high temperature of the gases to reduce said oxides. It should be noted that in order for the efficiency of the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine 1 to be optimal, the temperature of the internal walls of the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct 9, the hot gas intake duct 19, the cylinder Expander 13 and the cylinder cylinder cylinder 14 is similar to that of the hot gases contained in these various members 9, 19, 13 and 14. This allows to operate the cycle illustrated in Figure 7 almost adiabatic way. For this, said members are for example made of ceramic based on alumina, zirconia or silicon carbide. In addition, as shown in Figure 6, the intake metering valve 24 and the exhaust valve 31 and their respective seats and guides are locally cooled by a valve cooling circuit 51 in which a coolant circulates. After executing the cycle allowing the expander piston 15 to provide the desired work on the power output shaft 17, the gases expelled by said piston 15 into the expanded gas exhaust duct 26 reach the low-pressure regeneration line. 7 in said duct 7, said gases yield part of their heat to the air flowing in the high-pressure regeneration duct 6. As a result, the temperature of said gases falls in the vicinity. of ninety degrees Celsius while their pressure remains unchanged at about one absolute bar. These gases are then released into the atmosphere. It will be observed that in order to give the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine 1 according to the invention the best possible yield, from the output of the high-pressure compressor and to the motor output conduit 33, the various hot ducts and members which constitute said motor 1 may be covered with a material and / or a heat insulating structure that limits heat loss. As a non-limiting example, said material may be of any refractory and isothermal type known to those skilled in the art whereas said structure may take the form of at least one heat shield. In addition, the decisive role of the piston sealing means 53 which - when they consist in particular of a perforated continuous ring 105 - gives the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine 1 according to the invention an efficient operation is noted. and durable because indeed, it is essential to ensure the best possible seal between the piston expander 15 and the expander cylinder 13, in the best possible operating conditions. [0084] The operation of said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention is particularly understandable from the point of view of FIGS. 19 and 20, which show, purely illustrative and didactic, sealing means of ring 110 consisting of an O-ring 132. [0085] It is noted that in said FIGS. 19 and 20 "+" and "-" symbols surrounded by a circle have been added which illustrate the difference between the pressure prevailing in the pressure distribution chamber 119 on the one hand, and that prevailing in the pressure distribution groove 126, the counterpressure groove 117 and the transfer-expansion chamber 16 on the other hand. [0086] We will assume that the maximum pressure in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 is twenty bar while the source of pressurized fluid 112 produces a ring fluid flow 113 whose maximum pressure is forty bars. These pressure values are given for illustrative purposes and in no way limit the pressure variants that can be used by those skilled in the art in charge of producing the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention. It will be noted in FIGS. 1 and 2 that according to the particular embodiment of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention shown therein, the source of pressurized fluid 112 is a pneumatic fluid compressor 120 to Piston driven by the power output shaft 17. Advantageously, the piston of the low-pressure compressor 35 and that of the high-pressure compressor 36 are also equipped with sealing means similar to those of the piston expander 15, said means thus resorting to them. also to a source of fluid under pressure 112. It is noted in said Figures 1 and 2 that the source of pressurized fluid 112 which supplies the pressure chamber 129 which cooperates in sealing the piston of the low-pressure compressor 35 is other than the high-pressure compressor 36 while the pneumatic fluid compressor 120 piston supplies the pressure chambers 129 which cooperate in sealing the piston the high-pressure compressor 36 and the expander piston 15. It can also be seen in FIGS. 1 and 2 that the inlet of the pneumatic fluid compressor 120 is connected to the outlet of the high-pressure compressor 36 via a ring fluid cooler 54 and then a ring fluid filter 138. In these same Figures 1 and 2, it is found that the output of the pneumatic fluid compressor 120 is directly connected to the pressure chamber 129 which cooperates with the sealing of the piston of the high-pressure compressor 36 while said outlet can be connected to the pressure chamber 129 which cooperates in sealing the piston of the expansion piston 15 either directly or via a ring fluid cooler 54 according to the position of a fluid temperature regulator Thus, the ring fluid temperature regulator 55 makes it possible to adjust the ring fluid temperature 113 which is introduced into the pressure chamber 129 which cooperates with the sealing device. of the piston of the piston regulator 15. [0087] FIG. 19 shows said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine 1 according to the invention when the source of pressurized fluid 112 has just begun to flow from the ring fluid 113 and the chamber of FIG. pressure distribution 119 is just starting to build up pressure. We will assume that at this stage, the pressure prevailing in the transfer-expansion chamber 16 is still only an absolute bar. It is noted that the pressure distribution chamber 119 being sealed, in particular thanks to the O-ring 132, the ring fluid 113 has no other outlet than the calibrated orifice 111 to escape from said chamber 119. of operation of said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention illustrated in FIG. 19, the full flow of ring fluid 113 from the pressurized fluid source 112 is not yet established so that the pressure in the pressure distribution chamber 119 is only ten bars. Although the pressure of 40 bar is not yet produced by the source of pressurized fluid 112, it is noted that the perforated continuous ring 105 begins to swell despite the leakage of ring fluid 113 via the calibrated orifice 111 because the pressure prevailing in the pressure distribution chamber 119 is greater than that prevailing in the pressure distribution groove 126, the counterpressure groove 117 and the transfer-expansion chamber 16. The swelling of the perforated continuous ring 105 is symbolized by the arrow in dashed line. The flow of ring fluid 113 which escapes through the calibrated orifice 111 joins the transfer-expansion chamber 16 respectively via the pressure distribution groove 126, the counterpressure throat 117 and the interstice that constitutes the left-hand game. between the expander piston 15 and the expander cylinder 13. It will be noted that the section of the calibrated orifice 111 and the ring fluid flow rate 113 generated by the pressurized fluid source 112 are calculated so that the pressure of forty bars - when it is actually produced by said source 112 - can be maintained in the pressure distribution chamber 119 despite the ring fluid 113 escaping through the calibrated orifice 111. This amounts to saying that if no obstacle limits the swelling of the perforated continuous ring 105, the latter receives sufficient ring fluid flow rate 113 from the source of pressurized fluid 112 to inflate as much as if it were perfectly sealed, c as much as if it did not have a calibrated orifice 111. [0088] The radial thickness of the perforated continuous ring 105 is in turn calculated so that - taking into account the elasticity of the material constituting said ring 105 - when a pressure of 40 bar is applied to the inner cylindrical ring face 106 , the outside diameter of the perforated continuous ring 105 is at least equal to or greater than the inside diameter of the expander cylinder 13. [0089] As the pressure increases gradually in the pressure distribution chamber 119, the diameter of the perforated continuous ring 105 increases until the air cushion bearing surfaces 116 are found at a very short distance from the wall of the cylinder. Expander 13. This is shown in Figure 20. [0090] At this stage of operation of said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention, a significant loss of pressure is created between the air cushion bearing surfaces 116 and the expansion cylinder 13, said loss opposing the passage of the ring fluid 113. Accordingly, the pressure in the pressure distribution groove 126 and the counterpressure throat 117 increases to the point of being close to that prevailing in the This results from the fact that the pressure prevailing in said chamber 119 no longer exerts a radial force on the perforated continuous ring 105 only at the level of the air cushion bearing surfaces 116. this, because of its elasticity which gives it the attributes of a spring and makes it resistant to swelling, the perforated continuous ring 105 retracts, which has the effect of reducing the loss of c harnessing between the air cushion bearing surfaces 116 and the expander cylinder 13 and on the other hand, to lower the pressure in the pressure distribution groove 126 and the counterpressure throat 117, which again inflates the perforated continuous ring 105. As can be seen, the constriction force resulting from the stiffness of the perforated continuous ring 105 and which opposes the swelling of the latter on the one hand, and the pressure drop created between the air cushion bearing surfaces 116 and the expander cylinder 13 on the other hand, lead to a relatively unstable situation of the perforated continuous ring 105. Indeed, when the diameter of said ring 105 increases, the conditions which have led to said increase in diameter disappear while when the diameter of said ring 105 decreases, the conditions that lead to said increase are again met. [0091] As a result, the air cushion lift surfaces 116 have no choice but to find a relatively stable intermediate position at a very short distance from the expander cylinder 13. Said distance results from the initial clearance between the expander piston 15 and the expander cylinder 13, the pressure in the pressure distribution chamber 119, the stiffness of the perforated continuous ring 105, and the total axial length of the air cushion lift surfaces 116 relative to the total axial length of the internal cylindrical ring face 106 which is exposed to the pressure of the ring fluid 113. Said distance also results from the depth of the counterpressure groove 117 which constitutes in itself an additional pressure drop. According to the example of operation considered here, once the pressure of forty bars has been established in the pressure distribution chamber 119, the distance between the air cushion bearing surfaces 116 and the expansion cylinder 13 is of the order of a few microns, ie of the order of a micron or fraction of a micron. It is this short distance which, combined with a ring fluid flow 113 always going from the backpressure recess 115 to the transfer-expansion chamber 16 and not the opposite, provides a tight seal between the expander piston 15 and the regulator cylinder 13. [0092] It should be noted that, taking into account the particular operating world of said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine 1 according to the invention, the perforated continuous ring 105 naturally tends to center it in the expander cylinder 13 and to accommodate any defects in circularity or cylindricity of said cylinder 13. In fact, the position of the perforated continuous ring 105 results from a balance between, firstly, the general constriction of said ring 105 given by the stiffness of the latter and, secondly, the local radial forces applied at each point of the periphery and the axial length of the perforated continuous ring 105 said forces resulting from the aerodynamic interaction between the bearing surfaces of the cushion. air 116 and the expander cylinder 13. [0093] It is also noted that said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention allow various adjustment during their design. For example, other things being equal, the dimensioning of the section of the calibrated orifice 111 determines in particular the distance left between the air cushion bearing surfaces 116 and the expander cylinder 13, said distance also being adjustable by the stiffness of the perforated continuous ring 105 which depends in particular on its thickness. [0094] It is easy to deduce from the operation that has just been described that it is essential for the pressure generated by the source of pressurized fluid 112 to be always greater than that which prevails in the transfer-expansion chamber 16. This does not exclude the possibility of on sufficiently long time scales - to adapt the pressure generated by the source of pressurized fluid 112 to the maximum pressure occurring in the transfer-expansion chamber 16. However, it is noted that if the pressure chamber 129 has an anti-tamper valve proportional pressure return 140, the pressure in the pressure distribution chamber 119 may vary over short time scales like the pressure in the transfer-expansion chamber 16. This strategy may for example be retained if the piston expander 15 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention which receives said sealing means Piston age 53 defines with the expander cylinder 13 only one transfer-expansion chamber 16. [0095] Thus, it is understood that said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention constitute a robust solution for achieving an effective and durable seal between the expander piston 15 and the expander cylinder 13. [0096] Indeed, the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine 1 according to the invention requires that the operating temperature of the expander cylinder 13 and the expansion piston 15 is of the order of one thousand degrees Celsius or more. At such a temperature, it is excluded to resort to any oil lubrication whether of a segment or a ring. Moreover, whatever the material used to produce said cylinder 13 and said piston 15, whether it be for example ceramic based on alumina, zirconia or silicon carbide or any other material, such temperature, any contact between said cylinder 13 and a segment or a seal is impossible. However, said piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention are indeed compatible with such operating conditions. Indeed, the perforated continuous ring 105 never touches the expander cylinder 13 because it is separated from the latter by a ring fluid film 113 which can be - by way of non-limiting example - air from which is the atmosphere. Moreover, the perforated continuous ring 105 is constantly cooled by the flow of ring fluid 113 which passes therethrough and which licks the internal cylindrical ring face 106 and the outer cylindrical ring face 107. remember that to aid in this cooling, the pressure distribution chamber 119 can accommodate ring fluid diffusion means 124 such as those shown in FIGS. 13 to 18. Said cooling makes it possible in particular to use a perforated continuous ring 105 made of steel having the desired mechanical strength, without exceeding the temperature of income of said steel which is only a few hundred degrees Celsius. The use of a perforated continuous ring 105 made of steel raised to a few hundred degrees in a ceramic expansion cylinder 13 raised to more than 1,000 degrees Celsius also makes it possible to control the operating clearance between said ring 105 and said cylinder 13 in good conditions, which the calculation easily demonstrates. This is due in particular to the coefficient of expansion of the steel which is greater than that of the ceramic whether or not said steel is coated with a protective layer which protects it from oxidation. [0097] It should also be noted that the cooling of the perforated continuous ring 105 has as its corollary the local heating of the ring fluid 113. This makes it possible, on the one hand, to increase the volume flow rate of said fluid 113 with the same mass flow rate and on the other hand on the other hand, to increase the viscosity and therefore the lift of said fluid 113 if, for example, the latter consists of atmospheric air. This advantageously makes it possible to reduce the flow rate of the ring fluid 113 produced by the source of pressurized fluid 112 while allowing the piston sealing means 53 of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention to function in the conditions sought. It is also noted that it is possible to adjust the temperature of the ring fluid 113 before introducing it into the pressure chamber 129, which makes it possible to adjust the operating temperature of the perforated continuous ring 105 and thus, the play operating mode between said ring 105 and the expander cylinder 13. It is also noted that the flow of ring fluid 113 which flows between the air cushion bearing surfaces 116 and the expander cylinder 13 ensures the permanent cleaning of this latest. Thus, particles and solid residues of any kind can not adhere to the expander cylinder 13. In addition, it is not possible for a particle from the decanting-expansion chamber 16 to pass between the cushion bearing surfaces of the 116 and the expander cylinder 13 because the pressure of the gases in said chamber 16 is lower than that prevailing in the pressure distribution chamber 119. It will be noted that to ensure optimum operation of the air cushion bearing surfaces 116, as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, it is possible to provide a ring fluid filter 138 which rids the ring fluid 113 from any particle whose diameter is, for example, greater than one micron before said fluid 113 is introduced. in the pressure distribution chamber 119. FIG. 3 illustrates a variant of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention according to which the compressor 2 is no longer It consists of a low-pressure compressor 35 and a high-pressure compressor 36, but only one double-acting piston compressor. However, it can be seen in FIG. 3 that said compressor 2 cooperates with a water injector 56 which sprays liquid water 57 into the circulating gases in the compressor inlet duct 3 before said gases are introduced into the chamber. suction-discharge 58 of said compressor 2. It follows from this addition of liquid water 57 in said gas that a compression close to the isotherm of said gas occurs in the suction-discharge chamber 58. Indeed, during their compression, said gas charged with droplets of liquid water 57 give their heat to said droplets. Thus, a portion of the liquid water 57 contained in said droplets vaporizes when said surrounding gases give them the latent heat of the corresponding liquid water 57, while the other part remains in the liquid state and rises in temperature, said gas yielding to said other hand the sensible heat of the corresponding liquid water 57. [0098] As a result of this strategy, there is a significant reduction in the work punctured on the power output shaft 17 to compress said gases. This reduction in compression-resistant work results in an increase in the efficiency of the transfer-expansion-regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention. Once the mixture of gas and liquid water 57 is expelled from the compressor 2 via the compressor outlet duct 4, the air-water separator 59 is responsible for recovering the non-vaporized liquid water 57 which can be injected again. after being cooled in the liquid water cooler 77. It is noted that the fraction vaporized in the compressor 2 of the liquid water 57 10 constitutes an additional mass of gas intended to be raised to a temperature of, for example, eleven hundred degrees Celsius in the burner 38 before being expanded by the expander piston 15. The additional useful work thus produced is also favorable to the efficiency of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention. It will be noted - again in FIG. 3 - that in order to compensate for the loss of the vaporized fraction in the liquid water compressor 57, a condensing gas dryer 60 may be provided on the motor output conduit 33. Said dryer 60 has the function of condensing a part of the remaining water vapor 20 in the gases expelled from the low-pressure regeneration line 7, said vapor coming both from the vaporization in the compressor 2 of the liquid water 57 previously pulverized by the water injector 56 in the compressor inlet duct 3, and the combustion of the hydrocarbons in the combustion chamber 40, said combustion producing water by combining the hydrogen of the fuel with the oxidizer which is in this case and according to this embodiment of the heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration 1 according to the invention, atmospheric oxygen. It will be understood that the variant of the heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine 1 according to the invention as illustrated in FIG. 3 is - by its relative complexity - particularly suited to mobile industrial applications such as marine propulsion, or stationary such than power plants or pumping or compression stations. However, and subject to some miniaturization and adequate integration efforts, said variant may also be directed to heavy or light road transport, or to any other application without any restriction. [0099] The possibilities of the transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine 1 according to the invention are not limited to the applications which have just been described and it must also be understood that the foregoing description has been given only by way of example and that it does not limit in any way the domain of said invention which would not be released by replacing the execution details described by any other equivalent.
权利要求:
Claims (2) [0001] REVENDICATIONS1. Thermal transfer-expansion and regeneration engine (1), characterized in that it comprises: - At least one compressor (2) capable of sucking gases at a certain pressure via a compressor inlet duct (3) to push them back at a higher pressure in a compressor outlet duct (4); At least one regeneration heat exchanger (5) consisting of at least one regeneration high-pressure pipe (6) and at least one regeneration low-pressure pipe (7), a first end (8) that comprises said high-pressure duct (6) being connected to the compressor outlet duct (4) while the gases circulating in the low-pressure regeneration duct (7) can transfer part of their heat to the circulating gases in the high-pressure duct (7). regeneration pressure (6); - At least one regenerator high-pressure outlet duct (9) which has a first end (10) connected to a second end (11) that comprises the high-pressure regeneration duct (6); - At least one heat source (12) placed at any point of the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct (9) and which can superheat gases flowing in said duct (9); - At least one expansion cylinder (13) whose at least one end is closed by a cylinder cylinder cylinder (14) integral with said cylinder (13) or reported thereon, said cylinder (13) accommodating a piston expander (15) with which it seals to form a transfer-expansion chamber (16) of variable volume, said piston (15) being movable in said cylinder (13) and being directly or indirectly connected to a power output shaft (17) by mechanical transmission means (18) so as to impart continuous rotational movement to said shaft (17) when said piston (15) reciprocates in the expander cylinder (13); a hot gas inlet duct (19) which has a first end (20) connected to a second end (21) which comprises the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct (9), said intake duct (19) comprising a second e an end (22) passing through the cylinder head of the pressure reducing cylinder (14) to open into the expansion cylinder (13) via a hot gas inlet duct mouth (23); At least one metering valve (24) operated by a metering valve actuator (25), said valve (24) being able to close off or open the hot gas intake duct mouth (23); At least one exhaust gas exhaust duct (26) which comprises a first end (27) which passes through the cylinder cylinder (14) to open into the expansion cylinder (13) via an exhaust pipe mouth expanded gas (28), said exhaust duct (26) also comprising a second end (29) connected to a first end (30) which comprises the low-pressure regeneration duct (7); At least one exhaust valve (31) operated by an exhaust valve actuator (32), said valve (31) being able to close off or open the exhaust gas outlet mouth (28); - At least one motor output conduit (33) placed in the extension of a second end (34) that comprises the low-pressure regeneration conduit (7), or coincides with said second end (34) to form with the latter one and the same room. [0002] 2. heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration according to claim 1, characterized in that the compressor (2) is two-stage and consists of a low-pressure compressor (35) whose output is connected to the input a high-pressure compressor (36) via a compressor intercooler (37) .353. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 35 9. Thermal transfer regenerative regeneration motor according to Claim 1, characterized in that the power output shaft (17) rotates the compressor (2). A transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to Claim 1, characterized in that the compressor inlet duct (3) comprises a water injector (56) which can spray liquid water (57) into the gases circulating in said conduit (3) before said gases are introduced into a suction-discharge chamber (58) defined by the compressor (2) which sucks them. A transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to Claim 1, characterized in that the compressor (2) defines a suction-discharge chamber (58) into which a water injector (56) opens, the latter being able to spray the liquid water (57) in the gases introduced into said chamber (58) after said gases have been sucked via the compressor inlet duct (3) by said compressor (2). A transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine as claimed in any one of claims 4 or 5, characterized in that the compressor outlet duct (4) comprises an air-water separator (59). A transfer-expansion-regenerative thermal engine as claimed in any one of claims 4 or 5, characterized in that the motor output conduit (33) comprises a condensing gas dryer (60). A transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to Claim 1, characterized in that the compressor (2) has a compressor inlet metering valve (66), the opening and closing of which is controlled by a metering valve actuator. compressor inlet (67), said valve (66) being operable to connect the compressor inlet duct (3) with a suction-discharge chamber (58) defined by the compressor (2). Transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to Claim 1, characterized in that the high-pressure regeneration pipe (6) and the low-pressure regeneration pipe (7) are contiguous to one another or to each other. of their length, the flow direction of the gases contained in the high-pressure regeneration pipe (6) being opposite to the direction of circulation of the gases contained in the low-pressure regeneration pipe (7), the two said pipes ( 6, 7) constituting a countercurrent heat exchanger (41). 10. A transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine according to claim 1, characterized in that the heat source (12) is a burner (38) consisting of a fuel injector (39) and a combustion chamber ( 40). 11. A transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to claim 1, characterized in that the heat source (12) consists of a primary heat exchanger (46) which extracts heat from a universal source of heat (47) for transmitting said heat to gases flowing in the regenerator high-pressure outlet duct (9) directly, or via a secondary heat transport circuit (48). 12. heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration according to claim 1, characterized in that the cylinder cylinder expander (14) comprises a pressure equalizing valve (49) which closes or not a conduit connecting the transfer chamber- expansion valve (16) and the hot gas inlet duct (19), said valve (49) being open if the pressure prevailing in the transfer-expansion chamber (16) is greater than that prevailing in the intake duct of the hot gases (19) such that gases flow from said chamber (16) to said conduit (19), said valve (49) otherwise being closed so that said gases can not pass from said conduit (19) to said chamber (16); ) via said valve (49). 13. Thermal transfer-expansion motor and regeneration according to claim 1, characterized in that the transfer-expansion chamber (16) comprises at least one temperature holding fuel injector (140). 14. Thermal transfer transfer motor and regeneration according to claim 1, characterized in that the transfer-expansion chamber (16) comprises at least one anti-NOx water injector (141). Transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to Claim 1, characterized in that the expansion piston (15) is connected to the mechanical transmission means (18) by an expander piston rod (68) which passes through the expansion cylinder head ( 14), a seal being made between said rod (68) and said yoke (14) by rod sealing means (69). A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 15, characterized in that the rod sealing means (69) comprise a rod upper seal (70) and a lower stem seal (71) sufficiently far apart. one of the other to form - between the two said seals (70, 71) - an oil circulation chamber (72) into which a cooling-lubrication oil supply pipe (73) and a which leaves a coolant-lubricating oil outlet duct (74). A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 16, characterized in that the rod sealing means (69) cooperate with a rod guide ring (76) housed inside or outside the oil circulation chamber (72). 18. heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration according to claim 1, characterized in that the mechanical transmission means (18) consist of a rod (42) whose one end is articulated directly or indirectly in the piston regulator (15) and whose other end is articulated around a crank (43) integral with the power output shaft (17). 19. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 1, characterized in that the intake metering valve (24) and / or the exhaust valve (31) is guided directly or indirectly in a valve cage ( 50) housed in the cylinder cylinder (14), said cage (50) having a seat on which said valve (24, 31) can seat to form a seal while said seat and / or part of the valve cage (50) which guides said valve (24, 31) is cooled by a valve cooling circuit (51) in which circulates a heat transfer fluid. A transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to claim 1, characterized in that the expansion piston (15) has piston sealing means (53). A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 20, characterized in that the piston sealing means (53) comprise: at least one perforated continuous ring (105) having a ring internal cylindrical face (106), an outer cylindrical ring face (107) and two axial ring faces (108) said ring (105) being housed in at least one ring groove (109) formed in the expansion piston (15) while said ring (105) can move radially in the ring groove (109) without being able to leave it; - ring sealing means (110) which provide a seal between each axial ring face (108) and the ring groove (109), so that the latter defines with the perforated continuous ring (105); ) a pressure distribution chamber (119) connected by a transfer circuit (114) to a source of pressurized fluid (112); - At least one calibrated orifice (111) which passes right through the perforated continuous ring (105) in its radial thickness; - At least one air cushion lift surface (116) that includes the perforated continuous ring (105), said lift surface (116) being disposed opposite the pressure distribution chamber (119). 22. Heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration according to claim 21, characterized in that the piston sealing means (53) comprise at least one counterpressure recess (115) axially non-opening and formed recessed on the face outer ring cylindrical member (107), such that the surface of the ring outer cylindrical face (107) unoccupied by said recess (115) constitutes the air cushion lift surface (116) .23. A transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine as claimed in Claim 21, characterized in that the piston sealing means (53) comprises a counterpressure recess (115) which consists of a shallow counterpressure groove (117). more or less centered on the axial length of the outer cylindrical ring face (107), said counterpressure groove (117) being formed on the entire circumference of said outer cylindrical ring face (107). 24. Heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration according to any one of claims 22 and 23, characterized in that the calibrated orifice (111) opens into the counterpressure recess (115). 25. A transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine according to claim 21, characterized in that the calibrated orifice (111) opens into the counterpressure recess (115) via a pressure distribution recess (125). ) hollowed out at the bottom of said counterpressure recess (115). 26. Heat transfer engine-relaxation and regeneration according to claim 25, characterized in that the pressure distribution recess (125) consists of a pressure distribution groove (126) more or less centered on the axial length the outer cylindrical ring face (107), said pressure distribution groove (126) being formed on the entire circumference of said outer cylindrical ring face (107). 27. A transfer-expansion and regeneration heat engine according to claim 21, characterized in that at least one of the two axial edges of the outer cylindrical ring face (107) or the inner cylindrical ring face ( 106) which receives the counterpressure recess (115) terminates with an edge plating (118). 28. A heat transfer regenerative regeneration motor according to claim 21, characterized in that the ring sealing means (110) consist of a ring sealing lip (121) which is integral with the continuous perforated ring (105) on the one hand, and which makes a sealing contact with the inside or the rim of the ring groove (109) on the other hand. Transfer-expansion and regeneration thermal engine according to Claim 21, characterized in that the ring sealing means (110) consist of a thinned axial portion (139) arranged in the vicinity of at least one of the ends axial portions of the perforated continuous ring (105), said portion (139) being firmly attached to the ring groove (109) and being sufficiently flexible to allow the diameter of the perforated continuous ring (105) to to increase or decrease relative to that of said groove (109). A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration motor according to claim 21, characterized in that the perforated continuous ring (105) is made of a flexible material and comprises at least one circumferential ring spring (123) which tends to reduce the diameter of said ring (105). 31. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 21, characterized in that the pressure distribution chamber (119) houses ring fluid diffusion means (124) which forces the ring fluid (113). ) from the pressure transfer circuit (114) to lick the largest possible area of the internal cylindrical ring face (106) before escaping via the calibrated orifice (111). 32. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 31, characterized in that the ring fluid diffusion means (124) consist of a diffusion plate (136) housed at the bottom of the throat of ring (106), at least one of the axial ends of said plate (136) being provided with at least one orifice or diffusion plate side groove (137) which forces the ring fluid (113) from the circuit pressure transfer device (114) to be opened in the pressure distribution chamber (119) by at least one of its axial ends. 33. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 21, characterized in that the ring groove (109) has a radial ring abutment (127) which limits the penetration of the perforated continuous ring (105). in said groove (109). 34. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 21, characterized in that the pressure transfer circuit (114) consists of a pressure inlet tube (128) parallel to the expansion valve cylinder (13) and integral of the expansion piston (15), a first end of said tube (128) opening into said piston (15) while the second end of said tube (128) opens via a pressure chamber bore (130) in which it can translate longitudinally and sealingly into a pressure chamber (129) connected to the source of pressurized fluid (112). 35. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 34, characterized in that the pressure inlet tube (128) is connected to the pressure distribution chamber (119) by at least one radial inlet duct pressure (131). 36. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 34, characterized in that the pressure chamber (129) is connected to the source of pressurized fluid (112) via a proportional pressure check valve which allows the ring fluid (113) to flow from said source (112) to said chamber (129), but not to go from said chamber (129) to said source (112). 37. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claim 21, characterized in that the ring groove (109) houses an expansion spring (133) which bears on said groove (109) to exert a radial force on the inner cylindrical ring face (106). 38. A transfer-expansion-regeneration thermal engine according to claim 37, characterized in that the expansion spring (133) provides a sealing contact between the ring groove (109) and the perforated continuous ring (105). . 39. A heat transfer-expansion and regeneration engine according to claims 31 and 37, characterized in that the expansion spring (133) is provided with at least one fluid diffusion orifice (134) and / or with minus a fluid diffusion groove (135) so as to form with said orifice (134) and / or said groove (135) the ring fluid diffusion means (124).
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日 EP3250807A2|2017-12-06| CN107407228A|2017-11-28| FR3032235B1|2020-01-17| WO2016120560A3|2017-01-19| KR20170105607A|2017-09-19| FR3032235A1|2016-08-05| WO2016120560A2|2016-08-04| JP2018508689A|2018-03-29| JP6817946B2|2021-01-20| AU2016211107B2|2019-12-12| US9982626B2|2018-05-29| CA2974478A1|2016-08-04| CN107407228B|2019-11-12| US20160252048A1|2016-09-01| FR3032234B1|2020-01-17| FR3032236B1|2019-09-06| FR3032234A1|2016-08-05| AU2016211107A1|2017-08-17|
引用文献:
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法律状态:
2016-12-20| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 2 | 2016-12-30| PLSC| Publication of the preliminary search report|Effective date: 20161230 | 2017-12-22| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 | 2018-12-26| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 4 | 2019-12-26| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 5 | 2020-12-27| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 6 | 2021-12-27| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 7 |
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申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题 FR1550762|2015-01-30| FR1550762A|FR3032234B1|2015-01-30|2015-01-30|THERMAL MOTOR WITH TRANSFER-RELAXATION AND REGENERATION| FR1551593A|FR3032235B1|2015-01-30|2015-02-25|THERMAL MOTOR WITH TRANSFER-RELAXATION AND REGENERATION|EP16707837.7A| EP3250807A2|2015-01-30|2016-01-27|Transfer - expansion - regeneration combustion engine| PCT/FR2016/050161| WO2016120560A2|2015-01-30|2016-01-27|Transfer - expansion - regeneration combustion engine| CA2974478A| CA2974478A1|2015-01-30|2016-01-27|Transfer - expansion - regeneration combustion engine| CN201680011309.8A| CN107407228B|2015-01-30|2016-01-27|Transmitting-expansion and regenerative Thermal Motor| JP2017539450A| JP6817946B2|2015-01-30|2016-01-27|Transmission / expansion / regeneration combustion engine| AU2016211107A| AU2016211107B2|2015-01-30|2016-01-27|Transfer - expansion - regeneration combustion engine| KR1020177023304A| KR20170105607A|2015-01-30|2016-01-27|Transfer-expansion-regeneration combustion engine| US15/009,881| US9982626B2|2015-01-30|2016-01-29|Heat engine of transfer-expansion and regeneration type| 相关专利
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