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posted by martyb on Thursday July 11 2019, @06:50AM   Printer-friendly
from the also-useful-for-hiding-Dyson-spheres dept.

Scientists at the National University of Singapore (NUS) have discovered a method of using quantum mechanical wave theories to "lock" heat into a fixed position.

"Imagine a droplet of ink in a flowing stream. After a short amount of time you would see the ink spread and flow in the direction of the current. Now imagine if that ink droplet stayed the same size and in the same position as the water flowed around it. Effectively that is what we have accomplished with the spread of heat in our experiment," explained [Associate Professor Cheng-Wei Qiu from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the NUS Faculty of Engineering.]

Normally heat diffuses through a thermally conductive material, however in their experiment, Qiu and his team used the principle of anti-parity-time (APT) symmetry on counter-rotating rings to demonstrate that "it is possible to confine the heat to a small region of a metal ring without it spreading over time."

Assoc Prof Qiu and his team were able to control the heat [diffusion] by introducing an extra degree of freedom into their [...] experimental setup—the rotation of the rings

"For APT symmetry to become significant in a system, there must be some element of loss and gain within the setup—and they need to be balanced. In a traditional thermal diffusion system, APT symmetry is not consequential because there is no gain or loss [of] degree of freedom. Hence, the mechanical rotation is the key player here," he explained.

The abstract describes this thus:

experimental setup comprising two thermally coupled disks rotating in opposite directions. The thermal energy transported by each disk is strongly coupled to the disk rotating in the opposite direction, providing a return path for the heat wave. For a particular rotation rate, there is an exceptional point where thermal coupling and counterrotating motion balance, resulting in the thermal energy profile being stationary over time.

The approach has significant potential in cooling applications

Many modern technologies require the efficient removal of heat. Mechanical setups like engines, as well as computational and electrical components need to be effectively cooled. Currently, most technologies are cooled with a steady flow of liquid to take away the heat by convection.

"This experiment shows that we need to [be] more careful when determining the flow rate and design of these systems," Assoc Prof Qiu stated. Whilst his experimental setup contained counter-rotating metal rings, the same principle could be applied to other setups in flux.

The current experimental setup is only a few centimeters in size, the researchers next plan to work on scaling up the apparatus to match the size of real world motors and gearing systems.

Journal Reference (Note - DOI link is not functional although that may change. Direct link below.)
Ying Li et al. Anti–parity-time symmetry in diffusive systems. Science.


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by sonamchauhan on Thursday July 11 2019, @01:27PM (5 children)

    by sonamchauhan (6546) on Thursday July 11 2019, @01:27PM (#865794)

    Can someone with access to the actual paper comment? This is supposed to be a quantum mechanical effect, but the effect was validated in centimetre-sized counter-rotating metal discs (they must be rotating at a specific special speed). Futher, the investigator is planning to scale up... He seems sure it already happens in contemporary engines.

    Can someone translate the ideas down a couple of notches?

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  • (Score: 4, Funny) by GreatAuntAnesthesia on Thursday July 11 2019, @02:36PM

    by GreatAuntAnesthesia (3275) on Thursday July 11 2019, @02:36PM (#865813) Journal

    As I understand it, if properly scaled up and mounted into a gauntlet, staff or helmet, this would enable the Singaporean scientists to don capes and spandex and fight crime with their freeze ray.

    Admittedly I didn't RTFA, but that's the general gist I got from skimming TFS.

  • (Score: 2) by Rupert Pupnick on Thursday July 11 2019, @03:08PM (1 child)

    by Rupert Pupnick (7277) on Thursday July 11 2019, @03:08PM (#865821) Journal

    Agreed, this is a rather astonishing demonstration of a system at a classical scale behaving in ways the seem to violate the laws of thermodynamics. The key concept seems to be “anti-parity-time symmetry” but I can’t find a definition of what that means. Is it really quantum mechanics? In googling around, it seems to be an effect predicted by wave physics which I don’t think of as restricted to the field of quantum mechanics.

    I found a paper that appears to give more detail about the experiment here: https://www.sciencemagazinedigital.org/sciencemagazine/12_april_2019_Main/MobilePagedArticle.action?articleId=1480378#articleId1480378 [sciencemagazinedigital.org]

    It leaves a lot of layman’s questions unanswered, the big one being: is this experiment supposed to be taking place in a closed system (or a good approximation of one). I assume that the answer to that is “yes”.

    • (Score: 1) by RandomFactor on Thursday July 11 2019, @03:45PM

      by RandomFactor (3682) Subscriber Badge on Thursday July 11 2019, @03:45PM (#865829) Journal

      That link is much better, thank you.

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  • (Score: 1) by ze on Thursday July 11 2019, @04:49PM

    by ze (8197) on Thursday July 11 2019, @04:49PM (#865854)

    I haven't actually read more than the summary here, so this is probably glib if not outright wrong, grain of salt and all that, but:
    It sounds to me like the counter-rotating rings make a sort of treadmill for the heat, handing it back and forth between each other, and sped to match its transfer rate, so it that it's essentially "running in place".

    Yeah, that sounds likely oversimplified at best, and doesn't reveal anything about the meaning of anti-time-parity symmetry, so... *shrug*

  • (Score: 2) by cosurgi on Thursday July 11 2019, @07:37PM

    by cosurgi (272) on Thursday July 11 2019, @07:37PM (#865928) Journal
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