
Active thermal cloak hides a circular object in conductive heat flow by “pumping” heat from hot end to cold end. CREDIT: Xu & Zhang/NTU
Light, sound, and now, heat — just as optical invisibility cloaks can bend and diffract light to shield an object from sight, and specially fabricated acoustic metamaterials can hide an object from sound waves, a recently developed thermal cloak can render an object thermally invisible by actively redirecting incident heat.
The system, designed by by scientists at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore, has the potential to fine-tune temperature distribution and heat flow in electronic and semiconductor systems. It has application in devices with high requirements for efficient dissipation and homogenous thermal expansion, such as high-power engines, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) instruments, and thermal sensors.
“Because of its shape flexibility, the active thermal cloak might also be applied in human garments for effective cooling and warming, which makes a lot of sense in tropical areas such as Singapore,” said Prof. Baile Zhang of NTU.
Zhang and colleagues had been experimenting with metamaterials, artificial composites that exhibit properties not found in naturally occurring substances. They had previously designed a metamaterial thermal cloak that passively guided conductive heat around a hidden object. That device lacked an on/off switch and could not be adapted to objects of varying geometries.
“We then started to consider the question of whether we can control thermal cloaking electrically, not by guiding heat around the hidden object passively with traditional metamaterials, but by ‘pumping’ heat from one side of the hidden object to the other side actively, with thermoelectric modules,” Zhang said. He and his colleagues describe the construction and thermal mechanics of their cloak this week in a story that appears on the cover of Applied Physics Letters, from AIP Publishing.
Building the Thermal Cloak
To construct their active thermal cloak, the researchers deployed 24 small thermoelectric modules, which are semiconductor heat pumps controlled by an external input voltage, around a 62-millimeter diameter air hole in a carbon steel plate just 5 mm thick. The modules operate via the Peltier effect, in which a current running through the junction between two conductors can remove or generate heat. When many modules are attached in series, they can redirect heat flow. The researchers attached the bottom and top ends of the modules to hot and cold surfaces at 60° C and 0° C respectively, to generate a diffusive heat flux.
When the researchers applied a variety of specific voltages to each of the 24 modules, the heat falling on the hot-surface side of the air hole was absorbed and delivered to a constant-temperature copper heat reservoir attached to the modules. The modules on the cold-surface side released the same amount of heat from the reservoir into the steel plate. This prevented heat from diffusing through the air hole, a technique, the researchers say, that can be used to shield sensitive electronic components from heat dissipation.
Additionally, the researchers found that their active thermal cloaking was not limited by the shape of the object being hidden. When applied to a rectangular air hole, the thermoelectric devices redistributed heat just as effectively as in the circular one.
Looking ahead, Zhang and his colleagues plan to apply the thermal cloaks in electronic systems, improving the efficiency of heat transfer, and develop an intelligent control system for the cloak.
Read more: A Thermal Invisibility Cloak Actively Redirects Heat
The Latest on: Thermal Invisibility Cloak
via Google News
The Latest on: Thermal Invisibility Cloak
- Active Camouflage Material Shows Promise At Hiding From Infrared Or Visual Detectionon January 16, 2021 at 4:00 pm
An invisibility cloak may seem like science fiction ... uses hexagonal panels fitted with Peltier elements to alter the thermal signature of military vehicles. Here, it’s shown switched off ...
- deep learningon January 11, 2021 at 4:00 pm
There are millions of IoT devices out there in the wild and though not conventional computers, they can be hacked by alternative methods. From firmware hacks to social engineering, there are tons ...
- Graphene Descriptionon August 14, 2020 at 7:56 pm
Thermal interface materials (TIMs ... This makes a single layer of graphene the thinnest possible invisibility cloak. Over the last decade, various solid lubricant materials, micro/nano patterns, and ...
- 2. Transformers: Fall of Cybertron Story walkthroughon March 15, 2019 at 10:53 pm
Move up and the game will tell you to cloak. You need to reach the end of this section without being spotted. Below is a video aid for reference: Sneak up and stealth kill the first enemy here ...
- Beyond Invisibility: Engineering Light With Metamaterialson March 26, 2016 at 12:09 pm
A group in Germany has successfully created a thermal cloak, preventing an area from heating by bending the heat flow around it – just as an invisibility cloak bends light. The principle has ...
- Summer Camps and Career Explorationson January 12, 2016 at 4:17 pm
By the time your final product cools, you will have accomplished deformation processing—changing something's shape by force—and thermal processing—subjecting something to high temperatures. Learn the ...
via Bing News