A mechanical autonomous stochastic heat engine
Abstract
Stochastic heat engines are devices that generate work from random thermal motion using a small number of highly fluctuating degrees of freedom. Proposals for such devices have existed for more than a century and include the Maxwell demon and the Feynman ratchet. Only recently have they been demonstrated experimentally, using e.g., thermal cycles implemented in optical traps. However, the recent demonstrations of stochastic heat engines are nonautonomous, since they require an external control system that prescribes a heating and cooling cycle, and consume more energy than they produce. This Report presents a heat engine consisting of three coupled mechanical resonators (two ribbons and a cantilever) subject to a stochastic drive. The engine uses geometric nonlinearities in the resonating ribbons to autonomously convert a random excitation into a low-entropy, nonpassive oscillation of the cantilever. The engine presents the anomalous heat transport property of negative thermal conductivity, consisting in the ability to passively transfer energy from a cold reservoir to a hot reservoir.
Additional Information
© 2016 American Physical Society. Received 1 February 2016; published 28 June 2016. This work was supported by ETH Research Grant No. ETH-24 15-2 and ETH Zurich Foundation Seed Project ESC-A 06-14.Attached Files
Published - PhysRevLett.117.010602.pdf
Submitted - 1601.07547.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 65399
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20160316-135726780
- ETH Zurich
- ETH-24 15-2
- ETH Zurich Foundation Seed Project
- ESC-A 06-14
- Created
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2016-03-16Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-10Created from EPrint's last_modified field