Contribution to a General Theory of Thermocouples
- 1 July 1959
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 30 (7) , 1080-1083
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1776982
Abstract
Application of thermodynamics of irreversible processes to a thermocouple of which (a) the bars have an arbitrary shape, (b) the properties of the materials are arbitrary functions of temperature, and (c) the composition is, under certain restrictions, inhomogeneous and anisotropic, leads through introduction of a single place coordinate to two nonlinear differential equations describing the stationary distribution of temperature and electrical potential. Output powers and efficiencies are expressed in terms of the temperature gradients in the bars. The maximal values of the efficiencies obtained by variation of the shape of the bars are independent of the shape. Upper bounds of the efficiencies attainable by stationary thermoelectric conversion are derived. If the shape of the bars is restricted to general cylinders and truncated wedges or cones the transient behavior is described by two partial differential equations which contain two independent variables only. A periodic ripple in the electrical current has the same effect as a decrease of the electrical conductivities of the materials.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cascading of Peltier Couples for Thermoelectric CoolingJournal of Applied Physics, 1956
- Stationary Temperature Distribution in an Electrically Heated ConductorJournal of Applied Physics, 1954
- Some experiments with peltier effectElectrical Engineering, 1951
- Ueber das Problem eines elektrisch erwärmten LeitersAnnalen der Physik, 1900