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  4. Could I power my home with the Seebeck effect?
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Could I power my home with the Seebeck effect?

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Offline nudephil (OP)

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Could I power my home with the Seebeck effect?
« on: 01/04/2020 09:56:43 »
Jack sent us this:

I live on several acres of heavily wooded land. I'm interested in converting heat from burning wood into electricity. Would the Seebeck Effect, used optimally, generate sufficient electrical current that I could use it to power appliances in my home?

Would it?
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Offline alancalverd

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Re: Could I power my home with the Seebeck effect?
« Reply #1 on: 01/04/2020 13:04:23 »
Yes, in principle, as long as you have a decent heat sink. The problem is, however, that metallic thermocouples can produce a lot of current but only at a few millivolts. You can stack semiconductors to produce a useful voltage that  can drive an inverter and thus power domestic appliances, but they are limited to small temperature differentials - say 100 deg max. Some time ago I had an idea for a mechanical inverter based on a rotating copper/iron junction generating hundreds of amps - it's used as a magnetic switch to close off a gas supply if the pilot light is extinguished - but I never got round to building it.
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Tags: seebeck  / thermoelectric  / power  / electricity  / thermal  / electric  / energy 
 
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