TEC Heater/Cooler - Can It Be Done?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Pengwuino
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
A TEC (thermo-electric cooler) can potentially be used to create a heater/cooler device by sealing two compartments with the TEC in the middle. For effective operation, a heat sink is necessary to manage heat flow; one side must be heated while the other is cooled. The discussion raises concerns about the performance of the TEC when both sides are at the same temperature and whether it can maintain temperature differences. If the compartments are empty, there is uncertainty about whether the hot side would overheat or if the current would shut down until contents are added. Continuous heat removal from the hot compartment could help maintain a cold temperature on the other side.
Pengwuino
Gold Member
Messages
5,112
Reaction score
20
Hey guys i hve been wondering about something for the longest time. If you created 2 compartments and a TEC in the middle and sealed both sides off from one another, would you be able to create a heater/cooler device in one?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Anyone lol?
 
Just so you don't feel lonely in here, I'll ask the obligatory dumb question: what is "TEC" an abbreviation for?
 
Thermo-electric cooler(TEC). The answer is maybe. For a peltier to work properly a sink must be used. If you want to use a peltier to heat something then you need to have a substance from which a heat flux will flow from. If you want to use the peltier as a cooler then you need to remove the excess heat from the heated side. So, for you device to work you'd need something cold that needs to be heated up in one compartment and something warm that needs to be cooled(theses already exist BTW---igloo used to make something similar).

Have you had a thermodynamics class? Essentially, a peltier is a heat pump but instead of a motor driven pump moving a working fluid you have an electron flow driven by a difference in voltage.
 
Yah i understand how it works but i was wondering what the result would be if the same temperature was on both sides. I was wondering if they would go to the delta T naturally. Was thinking it would "strip" heat away from the cold side and put it into the hot side. The thing is though that at times, the box would be empty (no hot/cold food or soda in there) so i was wondering if the hot side would start heating up too high or if the current would shut down until something was introduced or what.

Maybe if i push out heat from the hot compartment 24/7, the cold side would stay cold and the hotside wouldn't get outa control.
 
Thread 'How can I find the cleanout for my building drain?'
I am a long distance truck driver, but I recently completed a plumbing program with Stratford Career Institute. In the chapter of my textbook Repairing DWV Systems, the author says that if there is a clog in the building drain, one can clear out the clog by using a snake augur or maybe some other type of tool into the cleanout for the building drain. The author said that the cleanout for the building drain is usually near the stack. I live in a duplex townhouse. Just out of curiosity, I...
Hi all, I have a question. So from the derivation of the Isentropic process relationship PV^gamma = constant, there is a step dW = PdV, which can only be said for quasi-equilibrium (or reversible) processes. As such I believe PV^gamma = constant (and the family of equations) should not be applicable to just adiabatic processes? Ie, it should be applicable only for adiabatic + reversible = isentropic processes? However, I've seen couple of online notes/books, and...
Back
Top