Can We Create Coolness Without Heat Using Innovative Technologies?

  • Thread starter Thread starter NickPerry
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Cooling Heat
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the challenges of creating coolness without generating excess heat, contrasting it with the efficiency of heat generation methods. Techniques like phase change cooling and the Peltier effect require existing temperature differentials or generate significant heat, limiting their effectiveness. The phonovoltaic cell, which converts lattice vibrations into energy, faces efficiency issues and is restricted to high-energy environments. While air conditioners can achieve high efficiency ratings, they still produce excess heat, complicating their use in sealed environments like a Venus rover. The conversation highlights the need for innovative cooling solutions that minimize heat output while effectively managing thermal energy.
NickPerry
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
ok, we have a really efficient way to make heat (adding energy into a system) all we have to do is pass a current through a high resistance wire, boom, close to %100 heat generation.

however, from what I can tell there is no way to create coolness (take energy away from a system) like that.

we have:
Phase change: (requires a lot of energy, generates a lot of heat that needs to be transferred else where)
peltier effect: (requires there to be a temperature differential to already exist)
sterling engine: (See peltier effect)

and on the fringe we have
%230 efficient LED (made in the MIT lab) which uses power + some heat to make light, but still takes power

and I think the closest we have is an Optical rectenna which takes visible and infrared wavelengths and turns it into power, however, it only works with RF waves, not particle movement.

is there a way to simply absorb particle movements and convert it straight into electricity like some ultra-small piezo generator? where it would generate power from a room simply by sucking the heat out of it & without needing a place to dump any excess heat.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
of course right after I post this I find the answer I'm looking for.
apparently it sort-of exists, and it's called a phonovoltaic (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonovoltaic) which converts the lattice vibrations into energy, but apparently it only works in high energy environments, in a narrow band... but it's a good starting point.
 
NickPerry said:
is there a way to simply absorb particle movements and convert it straight into electricity like some ultra-small piezo generator? where it would generate power from a room simply by sucking the heat out of it & without needing a place to dump any excess heat.

Hmm... I'm not super familiar with this area, but I don't think so. This sounds sort of like Maxwell's[/PLAIN] Demon. You certainly wouldn't be able to convert all of the thermal energy into electricity, but perhaps you can convert some of it. No matter what you do you will have "excess heat" that needs to be removed or dealt with. The phonovoltaic cell runs into the problem that high energy phonons get converted into multiple low energy phonons, lowering the efficiency. In fact, the pV cell is limited to a maximum efficiency approaching the Carnot limit.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
NickPerry said:
ok, we have a really efficient way to make heat (adding energy into a system) all we have to do is pass a current through a high resistance wire, boom, close to %100 heat generation.

however, from what I can tell there is no way to create coolness (take energy away from a system) like that.
Well, air conditioners run about 300% efficiency, so I'd say that's better!
 
  • Like
Likes anorlunda
wow, I should probably check this forum more often, Thank you for the answers (although they are perhaps not what I want to hear :p)

"The phonovoltaic cell runs into the problem that high energy phonons get converted into multiple low energy phonons, lowering the efficiency. In fact, the pV cell is limited to a maximum efficiency approaching the Carnot limit."

That is very unfortunate.. but doesn't Carnot's limit basically state that the effect would be limited to the temperature differential? but since we aren't using a temperature differential would that not mean that does not apply?"Well, air conditioners run about 300% efficiency, so I'd say that's better! "

HA! yeah, got to love that marketing wank :p (but I must say that I haven't heard companies advertise those kinds of figures in a while now)
 
NickPerry said:
That is very unfortunate.. but doesn't Carnot's limit basically state that the effect would be limited to the temperature differential? but since we aren't using a temperature differential would that not mean that does not apply?

I confess I do not know. :cry:
 
NickPerry said:
"Well, air conditioners run about 300% efficiency, so I'd say that's better! "

HA! yeah, got to love that marketing wank :p (but I must say that I haven't heard companies advertise those kinds of figures in a while now)
No, they advertise COP or SEER...which people often understand even less. But my point was that your opening post implied to me that cooling can't be done as efficiently as heating, which isn't true. In terms of output vs input, cooling is much better than heating.

If what you are after is just solid state cooling, regardless of efficiency, try thermoelectric (peltier) devices.
 
russ_watters said:
No, they advertise COP or SEER...which people often understand even less. But my point was that your opening post implied to me that cooling can't be done as efficiently as heating, which isn't true. In terms of output vs input, cooling is much better than heating.

If what you are after is just solid state cooling, regardless of efficiency, try thermoelectric (peltier) devices.
My apologies, I probably shouldn't have used the word 'efficiency' and the only reason I did is because if you have an air conditioner inside a room with no way for it to vent out, the amount of heat it outputs would be greater than the amount it can cool.

what sparked this question was the fact I was trying to think of a way to cool down components on a Venus rover where everything is fairly hot, and to try and pump out hot air of a standard air conditioner system doesn't strike me as the best way to go about it. rather it would be better if you could make a sealed compartment with something to cool the air (a peltier wouldn't really work because any heat-sink designed to whisk away the hot side would work in reverse, heating up the peltier as a whole instead. perhaps if I used a series of progressively cooler chambers..)
and that got me trying to think of other methods, hence this question.
 
Back
Top