It leaves me guessing which subsociety actually has access. Quite
plausibly there is no paper at all and only an abstract, as is often
the case at proceedings like this.
But a little googling got me to this:
http://parisetech.com/technology.html
and this:
http://parisetech.com/ECTecPaper.pdf
I think if you contact him he will ask you for money.
mt
> I suppose the same question applies to painting roofs white -- all the
> energy of making and applying the paint or new roofing material could
> be used differently too.
Sure, but at least the effect is free, whereas LEDs need powering...from
somewhere. I realise that this does not necessarily guarantee it's a
better alternative, but it's a pretty strong indicator. I also think it
is well established that white roofing is economically better than free
in areas where airconditioning is a significant cost.
> Heat that's already at the infrared level is mostly waste now, hard to
> scrape it up somehow into thermodynamically useful energy. Can a
> range of infrared be captured and used to emit in an IR window band?
My point exactly. All a bit moot in absence of any idea what is actually
being proposed.
James
> http://parisetech.com/ECTecPaper.pdf
>
Sorry, didn't realise you had actually found the paper until I did some
googling myself and got to the same point. I believe it's a form of
perpetual motion machine. In particular, the "cooler" relies on
radiating away energy in order to create a temperature differential
which can be used to generate sufficient energy to radiate away the heat
that passes through the generator.
As such, I'm surprised it hasn't made a bigger splash with the denialists...
James
Michael Tobis wrote:
HA HAR HAR! Thanks for a good laugh to start the day off. :-)
My own favorite crackpot scheme along these lines is to generate electricity
with IR photocells inside a power plant exhaust stack. I suppose you could
feed it directly to rooftop IR LEDs to re-radiate as heat, with
thermodynamic losses all along the way. The only possible use for the
scheme would be to shift the IR wavelength to a band that is not already
saturated. I'm foggy on the physics of what happens to the beam after it
leaves the LED, but isn't there a very thick blanket of molecules to
penetrate before reaching the black body of space? Maybe that's why
superior crackpots prefer lasers - more punch to get through the fog.
-dl
Divding by the number of hours in a year, the total emissions must average
3.31e12 W over a surface area of 6.5e10 m^2 or 50 watts per square meter.
I have to admit if the stuff were free and worked this well it would
be better than white paint.
One problem is that anthropogenic greenhouse forcing is much more
effective than direct heating.
Leaving aside capital costs, to counteract global warming due to 550
ppmv CO2 equivalent (4 W/m^2 global) would require 1/12 of the earth's
surface to be covered in this stuff. Or about 1/3 of the land surface
area.
Then you have to consider whether it would work in the daytime or
under cloudy conditions or (as described briefly in the white paper)
in humid conditions. Accounting for various inefficiencies and
practicalities, then, we essentially have to pave the earth in Parise
devices to preserve life as we know it, which seems a bit
contradictory.
That all said a device that could passively generate 50 watts of
infrared per square meter would surely be enormously useful for other
reasons. Perhaps there are some other problems with the design?
mt
> That all said a device that could passively generate 50 watts of
> infrared per square meter would surely be enormously useful for other
> reasons. Perhaps there are some other problems with the design?
Like I said, it's a perpetual motion machine. Other than that, yeah it's
all peachy. Energy too cheap to meter etc etc.
Surprising the patent office didn't spot it as they are supposed to be
on the lookout for these things. OTOH perhaps one could argue that it
isn't technically a true perpetual motion machine, but it's close enough
(unless I misunderstand something, which is always possible).
James