作者nfsong (圖書館我來了)
看板PCSH91_305
標題Physicists Shrink Heat Engines by Seven Orders of Magnitude
時間Sun Jan 24 19:35:35 2010
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/24702/
The vast majority of motors that power our planes, trains, and automobiles
are heat engines. They rely on the rapid expansion of gas as it heats up to
generate movement.
These engines play a crucial role in our infrastructure. But attempts to
shrink them by any significant amount have mostly ended in failure. Today,
the smallest heat engines have a volume of some 10^7 cubic micrometers.
That looks set to change with the announcement by Peter Steeneken and pals at
NXP Semiconductors in the Netherlands that they have shrunk the heat engine
by seven orders of magnitude. Yep, seven!
Their heat engine has a volume of just 0.5 cubic micrometers.
Here's how it works. The new heat engine is essentially a bar of
piezoelectric material whihc expands and contracts when an alternating
current is applied. So far so good.
The expansion and contraction also changes the resistance of the bar and so
also the amount of resistive heat that is generated. So passing a DC current
through the bar at the same time as the AC current causes the bar to heat up
and cool down. This heating and cooling also causes an expansion and
contraction of the bar.
Crucially, there is a phase lag between the piezoelectric and thermal
expansion and contractions.
So by choosing just the right driving frequency, it is possible to create a
resonant effect in which the mechanical displacement of the bar is amplified.
This is the regime in which the bar acts like a heat engine, pushing and
pulling to do work.
Steeneken and co have tested the idea in a preliminary design and shown it to
work well. And they've also shown that reversing the thermodynamic cycle
turns the the engine into a heat pump or refrigerator.
Of course, there are other, similarly sized refrigerators that work using the
Peltier effect but this one has an important advantage. "In contrast to the
Peltier effect, the direction of the thermal current does not depend on the
direction of the electrical current," say Steeneken and company.
Refrigeration may turn out to be the most important near term application.
The ability to pump heat away from microchips efficiently is nothing to be
sniffed at.
It's future as a motor is less clear. It's relatively straightforward to make
electrostatic motors that work on this scale and we've looked at plans to
build electric motors on the quantum scale.
Then there is the tricky question of efficiency. Today's macroscopic heat
engines are clearly more efficient than biological ones. But Steneeken
readily admits that "it remains to be seen whether they can ever compete with
biological or artificial molecular motors on the microscale."
Nevertheless, worth keeping an eye on.
Ref:arxiv.org/abs/1001.3170: Piezoresistive Heat Engine and Refrigerator
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