Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Are there any materials that are able to dissipate heat? I know how computers can run different chemicals, water, and other stuff to cool it but is there a passive material that can decrease heat?

Posted

No, there can't be.

At least not for any length of time.

You could use something like a wax that melts and absorbs heat, but you would have to keep supplying it with solid wax to keep it cool.

Posted

Of course but I meant something that is very good at absorbing heat and keeping it there and then later when it's cooler, is able to dissipate the heat quickly and at not-low temperatures.

Posted

For there to be spontaneous heat transfer with a there must be a temperature difference, with the heat flowing from hot to cold. A substance that retaining absorbed energy (i.e. it has a high specific heat capacity) would also tend to lose that energy slowly.

Posted

The ammonium nitrate doesn't react with water, it is just hydrated by it. That means the water molecule is left intact and is just electrostatically bonded to the ammonium nitrate molecule. The water being absorbed by the ammonium nitrate is an endothermic process and is reversible. You can heat up the ammonium nitrate and drive the water off the compound.

Posted

Said water or easily vaporized liquid could be in a closed circuit, eliminating the need to replenish it. Then the heat sink could be farther away from the heat source, hence bigger and more easily blown with fresh air.

 

An especially interesting shape of closed circuit is a tube whose inner faces are corrugated, possibly sintered, so the liquid wets them well. This would enable vapour to flow at the middle of the tube and liquid to flow back at the wall, even in seemingly less favourable orientations.

 

The tube being hermetically closed, the pressure could adapt to the operating temperature.

 

We're on the verge of inventing the heat pipe.

Posted

If you are looking for something without a flow (no water, wax, air), and no energy input (no electricity required, so no Peltier element), then you are looking at a radiator.

 

Here's a random website which shows some passive cooling units (note: these still require the air to circulate). Scroll down to "Passive Air Cooling".

 

Finally, even in space, radiators work. The ISS has radiators too, but I can't find a good picture now. Still, these only work if the radiators are relatively hot in comparison to whatever they are radiating at.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.