“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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Main Authors: Jon J. Papini, Jeppe C. Dyre, Tage Christensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2012-11-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.041015
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spelling 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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