Peltier Effect Cooling - Experiments with a Peltier Cooler Device
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- čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
- Today we will be doing some “science experiments” with a popular thermoelectric cooling device, the TEC1-12706 Peltier Module. We will also learn about the Peltier and Seebeck Effects.
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In 1834 a French physicist named Jean Charles Athanase Peltier discovered that passing a current through two dissimilar metals could create either an increase or decrease in temperature at the junction of the two metals.
This phenomenon is known as the Peltier Effect.
Modern Peltier Coolers are semiconductor devices, While they are not as efficient as conventional air conditioning they still have many practical uses.
Peltier coolers are used to cool down hot CPU and GPU chips in high-end computers, to power portable coolers, to cool the water in water dispensers, and even to reduce heat in spacecraft.
Today we will do some experiments with the TEC1-12706, a very common and very inexpensive Peltier cooler module. It’s easy to use, and a lot of fun to play with!
We will see how the device works and learn about the Peltier Effect and the Seebeck Effect, the complementary effect that can convert heat into electricity. We will even make some ice on the workbench!
We’ll also test a popular Peltier Cooling assembly that you can get on eBay and use to build a personal cooler.
Here is what is in store for you today:
00:00 - Introduction
02:50 - Learn about the Peltier Effect
04:48 - TEC1-12706 Module
08:02 - Experiment 1 - Hooking up the module
09:50 - Experiment 2 - Making Ice
12:24 - Experiment 3 - Generating Electricity
14:32 - Using a Peltier Cooler Assembly
As always you’ll find an accompanying article on the DroneBot Workshop website.
Keep cool and have fun! - Jak na to + styl
Awesome tutor!! 👍👍 you're a proof that everything can be understood with no brain-pain with the right fundamentals explained and building the right words upon them!
Hi, I really like your vids, about four yrs plus I purchased; I don't remember how many peltier tiles/ devices.
Just watched your vid and it reminded me, now I'll have to search for them and to try what I wanted to do back then.
Thanks for reminding me.
Hope you and all your viewers and subscribers have a great Christmas.
i have been looking for articles like this about peltier coolers and he explained it so clear... thank you sir.
Best tutor in youtube on thermoelectric ! 👍
Terrific video! I am looking to cool a small outdoor fish tank and this gives me some thoughts on how to go about it. Thanks for the work on it. I learned plenty.
Hi, honestly, I would want to have a professor like you during my Bachelor studies. I am more than sure, I would have much better marks and understanding of engineering.
and better career
Society is past the need for professors gentleman like this provide better experiences without the unnecessary affluence, because in the end people only care about what you can and can't do.
„Cool“ episode 👍
Peltier Coolers are also used in dedicated astrophotography cameras to cool the camera-chip and reduce noise in the images.
Very good video. I enjoyed watching and learned many things in 20 minutes. I like too, the open and close music. I watched while sipping coffee in my DroneBot Mug.
Great demonstration. I have the same Micronta multimeter that I bought from Radio Shack when I was a teenager back in the '70s - yours is a lot less beat up then mine after many years of use. We had a water cooler that used a pair of Peltiers to cool the water. It worked quite well and was silent vs. the water coolers that used a compressor.
Just got a pair of these, now I can also make some use of them, and all the heatsinks I have lying around... Thank You, Good Job Sir. Much appreciated.
Very simple yet to the point. Nice one man
I have just discovered your channel. I think it's great. I'll rewatch this with my nephew, and do the same at home, see if I can spark the engineering bug in him. Cheers!
Thank You For Helping Others LEARN!
A really good lesson. Explanation is easy to follow.
Very well explained and demonstrated. Thank you!!
It is amazing what a person with knowledge can do using the right words and equipment.
Love your video.
I bet getting that bench power was a big day for him!
Thanks
i had looked up like 5 videos of people complaning about how this works and i didnt understant.
Then i saw your video and i
learned alot Thanks :D
Oh what fun!
Thanks for another great video.
Excellent explanation and demonstration and to the point. Thank you.
Great presentation! This is very informative and concise. Cheers!
Good vid, thank you.
I made a shunt-type opportunity (solar/wind) charge controller for yachts using a set of water-cooled, current regulated peltier devices. Having a large supply of water, the efficiency increase over the typical air-cooled applications was incredible, even accounting for the small pump (which also ran in proportion to the hot side temps). I say 'set of', as these are current devices, not voltage devices. When I would start to exceed the maximum efficient current, then I'd switch another peltier device into circuit to keep the battery within my desired charge parameters.
The delta-T runs around 90*C (hot to cold), it's the Q that they suffer from. Most commercial applications use a forced air heat sink, my experiments showed that they were a much more practical device when water cooled (the colder the hot side, the colder the cold side, if that makes any sense).
You are super awesome man ! Welcome to the workshop !
Thank You, for sharing your information, I truly enjoyed it all JV.
Researching the Blaux portable AC brought me here, took me a while to find a website to finally tell me the science behind it and this looked like the best explanation of it and I'm really glad I found my way here; subscribed and am looking forward to learning from this channel!
Thank you for sharing! Amazing as always!!
Another excellent idea, thanks. Bill
Thanks for the video I learned something new today.
Thank you that was extremely helpful
I intend to do better placing comments. but this is my first comment on a post....If I could give you an A + I think you give the best tutorials. Others do not give enough details that leaves a person searching for more info. Keep up the good work. Thanks a lot.
Awesome class, thank you!
I'm here because I saw some guy cool his Steam Deck using this. Looked up what the effect is. Cool stuff!
I just wanted to say thank you your effort is noticed and I thank you for feeding my curiosity
Thanks again, nice video
Thank you for this amazing video
great presentation sir, you cleared all my doubt, god bless u
Excellent explanation sir!
Very good video. I've been aware of the effect but not the module for experimenting with it.
Muito obrigado. Excelente vídeo.
I LEARNT A LOT !! THANKS FOR THE VIDEO !
loved the vid, I had used two of the same peltier modules for a project 10 or so years ago, seemed real inefficient to cool beer from a keg through the system I made up, fine until you invite a friend or two. Princess auto had them in their surplus section at that time with absolutely no instructions or info. Eventually found out how much smoke it actually holds, I would not recommend 24volts.
Thanks professor!
Very helpful video. I like it
excellent! Thanks a lot.
Great video! Subscribed.
thank you
No one seems to be mentioning this, but this tech was used in space also for a long time. RTG (Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators) were used on probes, satellites, and rovers. Basically uses the heat from a radioactive source to make power.
Your workshop is very tidy good sir..
Awesome again.
excellent
awesome video!!
Thanks 🙏
Amazing devices
🎉🎉👍very very informative
Excellent video.
Thank you!
great videos.
Cool for a while and hot for the rest of the time.
thats what heat sinks are for dude
amazing
Perhaps a solar-powered combination beer cooler and soup warmer for the next camping trip?
Very interesting
I am thinking about building an evaporative cooler, which also uses a thermoelectric plate to support evaporative cooling. Thanks for your help!
Loved the video so much, thanks for the midnight science lesson :D
now I know where I could find it thanks
The voltage generation in a peltier device relies on temperature differential between the two sides. Keep the cool side cool, and heat the other side, and you get more voltage. I've never measured the current capabilities, but I don't think it's very much. Although, as stated earlier, they are used to run a fan on a stove.
Peltier devices are widely used to generate electricity in stove fans.
Stove fans actually use seebeck generators so TEG's not TEC's
@@YorkyPudinz What is the difference? Do they have a different nomenclature?
My Lincoln MKZ ventilated seats use 2 Peltier devices per seat it was a happy surprise as I always had heated seats never cooled. And let me tell you it gets over 100 degrees F with the fan cycling on and off blowing hot air at my backside
I would like to see a pop can cooler/oven.
I can see it now. A can of your favourite beverage getting cold and just below the cooler a mini oven heater up you lunch. Great little gadget for a office workers
My dehumidifier brought me here, it runs on a Peltier device and that interested me. Works really well too.
G R E A T...just GREAT!!!
This was pretty cool. I have a project I want to put outside for long term and living in Arizona, US this could be useful. However what is the current draw on the device?
I have 2 Ecofan AirMax fans that are Peltier effect powered that sit on top of my wood burner. They have a small motor that drives an 8 in fan blade that circulates warm air from the wood burner. Works good. Backup in case power goes out in the winter. Made in Canada.
Awesome video. I have a question that hopefully you may be able to answer. I have a couple of cooling units that came out of a laboratory pipetting machine. The Peltier devices are labeled as “TZ6B1203-10” and “TZ581505-02”. For the life of me, I cannot find any information on them. Any thoughts? Thank you.
a temp reading of the hot side exhaust on that kit would have been very important so that people would understand how bad efficiency is. Also the amps since i didnt hear the watts of that TEC...
During the video (I tried to be quiet) I checked out the prices of Peltier devices and they are CHEAP - cost effective. So thanks for the info, I can think of all sorts of uses - both hot and cold plus electricity in and out. Nice video.
Thank you for sharing...
but inefficient. power is not free.
Cheap is relative. Cheapest I've found for the exact same device is 3,27€ (about 3,50$ at time of typing) but this does not include the ones I've found from chinese (long delivery time) suppliers. My experience with them is that the published specifications just aren't accurate. At +-4$/piece geneeating about 2-3 watts of power with 80-100°C of temperature differential AND decent heat sinking, I'm not convinced this has any practical or economical advantage for general home or even industrial power generation. As he clearly mentioned, it's probably only interesting in very specific applications.
Just a question, just like you used a heater on one side and showed us how electricity is generated, I'm sure it works with cooling that way as well, right? Wonderful Video and Explanation! Thanks.
Very very cool! (sorry)... I am gonna play with this as a cooler or heater for the boat.. dang what fun!.. carry on and thanks for this one Bill.. new things to play with... outstanding! be safe..
LOL, somebody had to be the first to say it! Thanks Tink!
@@Dronebotworkshop So true.. and it always seems to be me.. thanks again Bill.. that video lite (is that the right word?) a fire in my imagination..
Hi, thanks for the video.
Can you please tell me what was the temperature value, at which 1.5V was obtained?
Thank you. I enjoyed the video. I am searching for a good MSc project on thermal engineering, maybe I will try a refrigerator using peltier device
exellent
Neat.
Great video! Thanks! Do you have a website where I can buy these?
This could have great applications when it comes to personal body temperature control
My thought exactly. The last time I worked with these was early 90s. My recollection was they were ceramic and quite expensive then. The video could have gone much farther -efficiency, what's better....
Educationally this is a great device to put in students hands for the concept of entropy.
It would be really terrible at that.
You would need a huge battery and an even larger heat sink
Maybe in space suits? But as mentioned, what about heat sinking?
How can I select to get those peltier from junk please ? 👍👍👍 Thanks very much for your information s.
Thank you. Why using fan temp stays 17 deg C? I have one with heatsink and fan on both sides with min temp 13deg c only??
You mentioned you could series modules for heat capture but there are better ways of heat capture. In your opinion, what’s the most efficient heat capture method? Say to charge a battery bank from a small camp fire as an example.
Nice video.if we use no.of devices.will it cool room of 1000sq.feet
Do you think using a peltier or two to heat / cool a small climate controlled chamber 2ft^3 would be sufficient?
Amazing! This peltier effect principle may well be the future of refrigeration and airconditiong. Look at LED's, they were formerly used as indicators or sensors only but now most lighting use this technology at cheaper cost of energy.
Peltier effect can someday produce cooling effect cheaper than a compressor can do. If only liquid nitrogen or CO2 is easy to come by.
actually its been around for many many years but due to TERRIBLE efficiency they are being replaced...
imagine that to cool a room you would need well over a kilowatt of peltiers and a gigantic power supply. The peltier in the vid is probably a 92watt@ 12v =7.6 amps
@@ihater3tards you need at least 3,5kw COOLING capacity for an average 30m2 room.
An A/C uses about 1kw for that.
Peltier would use 35kw for the same cooling capacity.
So dont even think about an air conditioning using anything peltier related.
Do you do research before leaving comments? I have some exotic sand to sell you. It's special.
@@op8995 Most people don't research before leaving a CZcams comment no lol, If you don't have anything nice to say and all that.
Excellent explanation you are master..l like to have the gizmo...l have great idea for used... tank you...one question if l order on line the name is gizmo...🤪🥳👏👏👏👏🤛👌👍
can i call down my workshop, in Australia it gets up to well over 48C in the summer, it will be 38 tomorrow.
If we have the same hot plate (50 degrees), the same heat sink, but different thermoelectric modules (e.g. TEC1-12702, TEC1-12706, or TEC1-12710), which one produces more power?
Can you please elaborate this as I'm new to this area :)
Whoa...
I'd never heard of the "Peltier Effect". . .
I googled it from my cheap camping cooler manual, and ended up here.
Thought the cooler was a gimmick, as last summer it didn't seem to get very cold.
So this summer I found/read the manual. . . . .
This would work well on Macbooks, to transfer heat away when they go into "meltdown" mode.
Nice looking workshop
A really cool episode....
You sly devil
it means can be use for room airconditioning or a heater
I have a peltier at my home but I don't know why doesn't it cool on the cool side, I have touched in the cool side that some parts/corners get heated. I have applied 12 volt 5 amps just one amps less than normal 6 amps.
I don't know how much of a factor it is here, but you really don't want to run these at full voltage. They will tolerate 12 volts, but they have terrible efficiency at higher currents (and they also hate PWM, or even just being turned on and off too frequently), so controlling them is not entirely trivial.
Is it possible to turn on and off 1 side of the peltier module? Like can I keep the cool side on but turn off the hot side?
Great video as always. Around 13:00 you mention there are more efficient ways to generate electricity from (waste) heat. Could you enlighten me as to which techniques these are?
I imagine he would say a heat pump. Like a mini split. I guess the Seebeck device is better for generation of electrical.
Hi you talked about generating power from heat saying that this is inafishant. What it the best way to get power from heat?
Still wondering about stacking these devices? How cold can they go?
Does the minimum internal resistance of the device set the max current (6 amps) that can flow through it or does the device require a current limiting supply to avoid excessive current flow?
I've asked muself the same question but I'm pretty sure it's internal resistance and maximum temperature resistance that dictate the maximum usable current through the device. Limiting the current through a resistor for a device that draws about 50-60 watts of power would make the whole thing even less efficient and pricy as 50+ watt resistors aren't cheap.