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Thermoelectric
coolers
Updated October
25, 2009
Click
here to go to our main page on heat
New for November 2007!
TECs use the Peltier effect to move heat. The Peltier diode has
the property of moving heat from one side to the other, when a DC
current is applied to it.
The opposite of the Peltier effect
is the Seebeck effect. In the Seebeck effect, a temperature differential
across the diode can be used to create a voltage, and supply power.
Don't get excited about this, the efficiency is very poor.
TECs are fabricated in modules,
where a large number of Peltier diodes are configured in series.
We borrowed this diagram from another corner of the world wide web,
hope they don't mind...

Here's an application that most
people are familiar with. TECs are used to build cheap beer coolers,
they have no moving parts. They are advertised to cool up to 40
degrees F below ambient. We recommend that you don't buy one of
these, they are far less efficiency than a "real" refrigerator,
and an occasional purchase of a bag of ice makes more sense (and
colder beverages) if you need portability. If you happen to leave
this type of cooler in your car, and your car supplies power to
the cigar lighter even without the key, you will soon be looking
for jumper cables, as they draw 5 amps continuously. TECs are NOT
efficient cooling devices. Notice you don't see the "Energy
Star" sticker on the cooler shown below...

TECs do have their place in microwave
electronics. One application is temperature control of an oscillator.
It is easy to add heat to drive up temperature, but to facilitate
a good closed-loop system you need a means of removing heat (and
reducing temperature). Often there is no room for anything but a
TEC.
More to come!
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