I Are 55% Efficient Peltier Coolers Using Vacuum Technology Real?

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A company claims to have developed Peltier coolers with 55% efficiency using a hard vacuum, but there are doubts about their legitimacy. The lack of response from the company raises concerns about whether it is a scam, especially since such technology has not appeared in consumer products. Analysis suggests that the technology may not work as promised, and the company appears to be struggling or defunct. The concept of using a vacuum contradicts the fundamental operation of Peltier devices, which rely on a PN junction. Overall, the claims seem exaggerated, as traditional compressors outperform Peltier coolers in efficiency.
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A company claims to have developed Peltier coolers that are 55% efficient by using a hard vacuum as the separate zone between cold and hot.
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. I can´t get them to respond to me. Is it a scam? If these devices actually work why haven´t we seen any in consumer devices?
 
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christian everett said:
A company claims to have developed Peltier coolers that are 55% efficient by using a hard vacuum as the separate zone between cold and hot...

I can´t get them to respond to me. Is it a scam? If these devices actually work why haven´t we seen any in consumer devices?
Based on a quick google and a generous characterization, I'll call them a company that has a technology that failed to live up to its promise. The company appears to be or about to be defunct and has been advertising their technology for so long that if they had it patented, the patent would have run out by now.
 
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I don't know much about semiconductor fab, but a Peltier relies on a PN junction, and it seems to me if you have a vacuum there, you don't have a junction. Maybe they have some way around that, but based on russ_water's findings, probably not?

At any rate, 55% "efficiency" sounds like a Coefficient of Performance (a measure of how much energy is moved compared to the energy used to move it) of 0.55. Compressors typically have COPs >1, and often > 3 . Though Peltiers have advantages in size, weight and fewer moving parts (fans or pumps are often used to dissipate the heat from the Peltier).
 
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