Optimal thermal refrigerator
Abstract
We study a refrigerator model which consists of two -level systems interacting via a pulsed external field. Each system couples to its own thermal bath at temperatures and , respectively (). The refrigerator functions in two steps: thermally isolated interaction between the systems driven by the external field and isothermal relaxation back to equilibrium. There is a complementarity between the power of heat transfer from the cold bath and the efficiency: the latter nullifies when the former is maximized and {\it vice versa}. A reasonable compromise is achieved by optimizing over the inter-system interaction and intra-system energy levels the product of the heat-power and efficiency. The efficiency is then found to be bounded from below by (an analogue of Curzon-Ahlborn efficiency for refrigerators), besides being bound from above by the Carnot efficiency . The lower bound is reached in the equilibrium limit , while the Carnot bound is reached (for a finite power and a finite amount of heat transferred per cycle) in the macroscopic limit . The efficiency is exactly equal to , when the above optimization is constrained by assuming homogeneous energy spectra for both systems.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0906.2583,
title = {Optimal thermal refrigerator},
author = {Armen E. Allahverdyan and Karen Hovhannisyan and Guenter Mahler},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0906.2583},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
4 pages, 2 figures