The Reverend Dr Robert Stirling (October 25, 1790 – June 6, 1878) was a Scottish clergyman, and coinventor of a highly efficient heat engine. All closed-cycle regenerative gas engines are now known as Stirling engines.
In 1819 Stirling married Jean Rankin. They had seven children, including the locomotive engineers Patrick Stirling and James Stirling (engineer).
Later, in Kilmarnock, he collaborated with another inventor, Thomas Morton, who provided workshop facilities for Stirling's research. Both men were interested in astronomy, and having learnt from Morton how to grind lenses, Stirling invented several optical instruments.
Robert's brother James, also an engineer, built a large air engine at his Dundee Foundry Company.
In a letter of 1876, Robert Stirling acknowledged the importance of Henry Bessemer's new invention - the Bessemer process for the manufacture of steel - which made steam engines safer and threatened to make the air engine obsolete. However, he also expressed a hope that the new steel would improve the performance of air engines.
Stirling died in Galston, East Ayrshire.
The theoretical basis of Stirling's engine, the Stirling cycle, would not be fully understood until the work of Sadi Carnot (1796 - 1832). Carnot produced (and published in 1825) a general theory of heat engines, the Carnot cycle, of which the Stirling cycle is a similar case.
1790 births | 1878 deaths | Scottish inventors
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