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January 13, 2019 at 2:36 am
afar
SubscriberHi,Â
My name is Giffari from IndonesiaÂ
My goal in making this discussion forum is I want to ask for help from those of you who have references to tutorials on making thermoelectric peltier (cooler) simulations from geometry to the results of simulations. I may request that reference be used as a reference for simulation work as a final assignment. on campus. Please help. If someone has, ask for help to reply to this discussion.
Thank you for the help. -
January 13, 2019 at 3:06 am
raul.raghav
SubscriberA quick google search on the topic came up with the following relevant resources:
Thermoelectric module with heatsink in ANSYS
ANSYS Thermoelectric Generator (TEG) Tutorial
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkNSno-fSq0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98309DseLAk
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January 13, 2019 at 3:38 am
afar
SubscriberSorry before, is it the same as making a simulation of thermoelectric cooler (peltier) with a thermoelectric generator (TEG)?Â
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January 13, 2019 at 3:55 am
raul.raghav
SubscriberThe above resources are to provide you guidance on how thermoelectric simulations are perfomed, starting from geometry to analysis of results.
TEC: Input - current, Output - temperature difference
TEG: Input - temperature difference, Output - current
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January 13, 2019 at 5:18 am
afar
SubscriberOwh, oke and one more question after obtaining the results is the temperature difference from the thermoelectric simulation whether these results can be used as input to find out the results of the distribution of temperature, humidity and air velocity on the cool box cooling system? i'm sorry
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January 13, 2019 at 5:36 am
raul.raghav
SubscriberGiffari, no need to apologize. Since you're dealing with a multiphysics problem, with Ansys AIM you can perform a thermal-electric analysis and then use the temperature difference to conduct a thermal-flow analysis.
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January 14, 2019 at 2:56 am
afar
SubscriberOke. Mr. Oh yeah one question again can we combine thermoelectric with heatsinks and fans to find out the temperature distribution and contour in the coolbox, for example? is there a tutorial?
Giffari -
November 1, 2019 at 12:44 pm
DeannaNash
SubscriberHi..for a practical you can go out and buy an already put together peltier cooler for around 40$, but don't. I have found that the quality will be much higher if your bulid it yourself, plus most of the pre-built peltier coolers on the market don't have fans/ heatsinks that cool down the hot side enough for what we need to use them for or are way overpriced for what they are.
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- The topic ‘Tutorial of Making Simulation Thermoelectric Cooler (Peltier)’ is closed to new replies.
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