“Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific Heat
Heating a solid sphere at its surface induces mechanical stresses inside the sphere. If a finite amount of heat is supplied, the stresses gradually disappear as temperature becomes homogeneous throughout the sphere. We show that before this happens, there is a temporary lowering of pressure and dens...
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2012-11-01
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Series: | Physical Review X |
Online Access: | http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.041015 |
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doaj-b754511c08c2453db98b719f592ffc772020-11-24T23:27:26ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082012-11-012404101510.1103/PhysRevX.2.041015“Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific HeatJon J. PapiniJeppe C. DyreTage ChristensenHeating a solid sphere at its surface induces mechanical stresses inside the sphere. If a finite amount of heat is supplied, the stresses gradually disappear as temperature becomes homogeneous throughout the sphere. We show that before this happens, there is a temporary lowering of pressure and density in the interior of the sphere, inducing a transient lowering of the temperature here. For ordinary solids this effect is small because c_{p}≅c_{V}. For fluent liquids the effect is negligible because their dynamic shear modulus vanishes. For a liquid at its glass transition, however, the effect is generally considerably larger than in solids. This paper presents analytical solutions of the relevant coupled thermoviscoelastic equations. In general, there is a difference between the isobaric specific heat c_{p} measured at constant isotropic pressure and the longitudinal specific heat c_{l} pertaining to mechanical boundary conditions that confine the associated expansion to be longitudinal. In the exact treatment of heat propagation, the heat-diffusion constant contains c_{l} rather than c_{p}. We show that the key parameter controlling the magnitude of the “cooling-by-heating“ effect is the relative difference between these two specific heats. For a typical glass-forming liquid, when the temperature at the surface is increased by 1 K, a lowering of the temperature at the sphere center of the order of 5 mK is expected if the experiment is performed at the glass transition. The cooling-by-heating effect is confirmed by measurements on a glucose sphere at the glass transition.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.041015 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jon J. Papini Jeppe C. Dyre Tage Christensen |
spellingShingle |
Jon J. Papini Jeppe C. Dyre Tage Christensen “Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific Heat Physical Review X |
author_facet |
Jon J. Papini Jeppe C. Dyre Tage Christensen |
author_sort |
Jon J. Papini |
title |
“Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific Heat |
title_short |
“Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific Heat |
title_full |
“Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific Heat |
title_fullStr |
“Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific Heat |
title_full_unstemmed |
“Cooling by Heating”—Demonstrating the Significance of the Longitudinal Specific Heat |
title_sort |
“cooling by heating”—demonstrating the significance of the longitudinal specific heat |
publisher |
American Physical Society |
series |
Physical Review X |
issn |
2160-3308 |
publishDate |
2012-11-01 |
description |
Heating a solid sphere at its surface induces mechanical stresses inside the sphere. If a finite amount of heat is supplied, the stresses gradually disappear as temperature becomes homogeneous throughout the sphere. We show that before this happens, there is a temporary lowering of pressure and density in the interior of the sphere, inducing a transient lowering of the temperature here. For ordinary solids this effect is small because c_{p}≅c_{V}. For fluent liquids the effect is negligible because their dynamic shear modulus vanishes. For a liquid at its glass transition, however, the effect is generally considerably larger than in solids. This paper presents analytical solutions of the relevant coupled thermoviscoelastic equations. In general, there is a difference between the isobaric specific heat c_{p} measured at constant isotropic pressure and the longitudinal specific heat c_{l} pertaining to mechanical boundary conditions that confine the associated expansion to be longitudinal. In the exact treatment of heat propagation, the heat-diffusion constant contains c_{l} rather than c_{p}. We show that the key parameter controlling the magnitude of the “cooling-by-heating“ effect is the relative difference between these two specific heats. For a typical glass-forming liquid, when the temperature at the surface is increased by 1 K, a lowering of the temperature at the sphere center of the order of 5 mK is expected if the experiment is performed at the glass transition. The cooling-by-heating effect is confirmed by measurements on a glucose sphere at the glass transition. |
url |
http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.041015 |
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