Heat engines transform thermal energy into useful work, operating in a cyclic manner. For centuries, they have played a key role in industrial and technological development. Historically, only gases and liquids have been used as working substances, but the technical advances achieved in recent decades allow for expanding the experimental possibilities and designing engines operating with a single particle. In this case, the system of interest cannot be addressed at a macroscopic level and their study is framed in the field of stochastic thermodynamics. In the present work, we study mesoscopic heat engines built with a Brownian particle submitted to harmonic confinement and immersed in a fluid acting as a thermal bath. We design a Stirling-like heat engine, composed of two isothermal and two isochoric branches, by controlling both the stiffness of the harmonic trap and the temperature of the bath. Specifically, we focus on the irreversible, non-quasi-static case-whose finite duration enables the engine to deliver a non-zero output power. This is a crucial aspect, which enables the optimisation of the thermodynamic cycle by maximising the delivered power-thereby addressing a key goal at the practical level. The optimal driving protocols are obtained by using both variational calculus and optimal control theory tools. Furthermore, we numerically explore the dependence of the maximum output power and the corresponding efficiency on the system parameters.
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Entropy (Basel)
January 2025
Física Teórica, Universidad de Sevilla, Apartado de Correos 1065, E-41080 Sevilla, Spain.
Heat engines transform thermal energy into useful work, operating in a cyclic manner. For centuries, they have played a key role in industrial and technological development. Historically, only gases and liquids have been used as working substances, but the technical advances achieved in recent decades allow for expanding the experimental possibilities and designing engines operating with a single particle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEntropy (Basel)
December 2024
Center for Advanced Control and Smart Operations, Nanjing University, Suzhou 215163, China.
We investigated the optimal performance of an irreversible Stirling-like heat engine described by both overdamped and underdamped models within the framework of stochastic thermodynamics. By establishing a link between energy dissipation and Wasserstein distance, we derived the upper bound of maximal power that can be delivered over a complete engine cycle for both models. Additionally, we analytically developed an optimal control strategy to achieve this upper bound of maximal power and determined the efficiency at maximal power in the overdamped scenario.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
September 2021
Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, İstanbul University, 34134, İstanbul, Turkey.
In order to examine the work and efficiency of the space-fractional quantum heat engine, we consider a model of the space-fractional quantum heat engine which has a Stirling-like cycle with a single particle under infinite potential well as an example. We numerically compute the work and efficiency for various fractional exponents. We show the work and the efficiency of the engine depending on the length of the potential well and fractional exponent of the engine.
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