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is the fluid of a heat pump, just after compression, hotter than it could be if the same amount of electric energy was put directly to heating that fluid?
Just to nuance myself after thinking this over for another 10 minutes: designing the right heat pump would not just be difficult, it would be impossible. It would be an impossible carnot cycle and violate the 2nd law of thermodynamics...Too bad.
For a heat pump system to extract energy from the environment you need both a source of heat and a source of cold that is why power stations spend a lot of money building cooling towers.
Quote from: syhprum on 28/02/2016 23:56:28For a heat pump system to extract energy from the environment you need both a source of heat and a source of cold that is why power stations spend a lot of money building cooling towers. Did you mean that for thermoelectric effect (or steam engine or something the likes) to work you need a temperature difference? Sure, of course.But a heat pump actually work the best when both source temp and target temp are the same (and it works to make one cooler and one hotter), doesnt it?*Input = 1 unit*Hot side = 3 units ->> generate anything >1 unit using thermoelectric/ piston/ whatever generator.*Cold side = -2 units ->> is replenished to 0 from environment. Sorry, I just cant let this thing go
Question 2 : Are there thermal generators (steam, peltier, w/e) that work at 35% + efficiency?
I really dont want to sound like a crack-pot, but, ... ughhh. What do I need to do to build this myself?
Quote from: McKay on 24/02/2017 17:18:38Question 2 : Are there thermal generators (steam, peltier, w/e) that work at 35% + efficiency?An electric heater is essentially 100% efficient.