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Unread 07-02-2003, 11:51 PM   #21
muffy
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Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
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How efficient is a thermoelectric cooler?
Technically, the word efficiency relates to the amount of energy one gets out of a machine versus how much energy one puts into it. In heat pumping applications, this term is rarely used because the energy-in is very different from the service provided. We supply electrical energy to a TEC, but we get heat pumping. For TECs, it is standard to use "coefficient of performance" not efficiency. The coefficient of performance (COP) is the amount of heat pumping divided by the amount of supplied electrical power. In other words, COP tells you how many units of heat pumping you will get for each unit of electrical power you supply. It is possible, in special situations, to pump more watts of heat than the watts of electrical power input. COP depends on the application, heat pumped, and temperature differential required. Typically, the coefficient of performance, heat pumped then divided by input power, is between 0.4 and 0.7 for single stage applications. However, higher COPs can be achieved with optimized custom TECs.

http://www.marlow.com/TechnicalInfo/..._faqs.htm#th07


well these guys make them and thats what they have to say on the subject .

they do say it is possible to move more heat then watts of power however they do state the norm is no where near that

so your both right and both wrong i guess
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