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The Electronic Heat Engine

SAE Technical Papers (1906-current) Available online

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Format:
Conference/Event
Author/Creator:
Aspden, Harold, author.
Conference Name:
27th Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference (1992) (1992-08-03 : San Diego, California, United States)
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource
Place of Publication:
Warrendale, PA SAE International 1992
Summary:
The electronic heat engine is a solid-state device fabricated as a 5 mm thick panel formed by assembling between two aluminium sheets a parallel plate capacitor stack comprising layers of a bimetallic-coated PVDF dielectric. A first prototype operated at 500 kHz and generated electricity at 70% of Carnot efficiency to power a small electric motor when one panel surface was at room temperature with the other surface in contact with melting ice. A second prototype of different design was equally efficient at 20 kHz. The technology exploits the Seebeck effect in a novel way which enhances the thermoelectric power of an aluminium-nickel thermocouple by an enormous amount owing to a dynamic excitation avoiding junction cold spot effects. The compact panel nature of this technology lends itself to combination with a patented technique for mirror focusing of thermal radiation in a multistage panel assembly, whereby to elevate the temperature of one surface relative to the other. This latter aspect is a research challenge which utilizes a modern army of Maxwell demons. In fact no demon' has to do work - the demons are inanimate, being miniature mirror surfaces. In a stage by stage process they redirect radiation from cell to cell in the panel layers in a way which traps some at higher and higher temperature
Notes:
Vendor supplied data
Publisher Number:
929474
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license

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