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by gsf_emergency_2
339 days ago
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I don't know how people can convince themselves that they can understand these effects. Unusually effective heat insulation is exactly how they work. (This is tempered by eg radiative losses, so making them thicker doesn't work better.) placing poorer heat (vs electrical) insulators between peltier material is counterproductive, similar to using resistors to improve conduction between copper wires Don't ask me for a better explanation :) As to why COP or even Carnot efficiency hasn't been thrown out in favor of temp-difference independent efficiency metrics like exergy. I can't tell you either |
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If one makes the walls thick, then they end up with a hole for the Peltier device and somehow sandwich two heatsinks on the device while maintaining insulation around it.
Perhaps easier to deal with in CPU cooling and such since one side is simply smacked into the thing being cooled.