I don't know if it's a frequency illusion or if a lot of people are playing with them lately, but I've seen tons of people mentioning peltier cooling lately.
I've been working on a design to cool my cpu with one. The best part about peltier modules is also the worst part: the cold side gets really cold. So cold you get below the humidity threshold, and end up with water all over your system. I'm trying to hook up a bunch of humidity, and temperature sensors to an arduino that will regulate the power to the peltier module to try to only let it get as cool as the relative humidity will safely allow.
What I'm getting at is you could do it, but a peltier cooler would need to be manufactured for it to be reasonable at the scale they're looking for.
I remember them being used for "extreme" overclocking.
Nowadays people in that department seem to have moved to the elegant solution of manually pouring LN2 on to a cup that sits on top of the CPU (or GPU).
I've been working on a design to cool my cpu with one. The best part about peltier modules is also the worst part: the cold side gets really cold. So cold you get below the humidity threshold, and end up with water all over your system. I'm trying to hook up a bunch of humidity, and temperature sensors to an arduino that will regulate the power to the peltier module to try to only let it get as cool as the relative humidity will safely allow.
What I'm getting at is you could do it, but a peltier cooler would need to be manufactured for it to be reasonable at the scale they're looking for.
Separate from the condensation problem they use a LOT of power. They're not terribly efficient, which would likely defeat the purpose. ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermoelectric_cooling#Perform... )