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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

The Tech That Tried to Beat the Compressor - Short #268

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 2 December 2025

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, Bryan tells the story of the technology that tried to beat the compressor... and still may someday.

We associate cooling with refrigerant... and all the things that come with it, including compressor noise, oil, recovery machines and tanks, leaks, superheat, and regulations. However, there is a means of providing cooling with two pieces of metal and several semiconductors; current runs through it, and one side becomes cold, and the other side becomes hot. This technology is called thermoelectric cooling, associated with the Peltier effect.

In 1834, French watchmaker and amateur physicist Jean Charles Athanase Peltier was experimenting with electricity and dissimilar metals. When he joined two wires of different materials and ran current through the junction, one got colder, and the other one got hotter. This phenomenon was named the Peltier effect, and it describes how passing electrical current through two dissimilar conductors causes heat to move from one side to the other, like a tiny reversible heat pump. However, it didn't have any practical use at the time.

Semiconductors arrived in the mid-1900s, and engineers could make thermoelectric devices strong enough to move meaningful amounts of heat. In the 1960s, NASA even began using the technology in spacecraft for precision temperature control, which was hardy and allowed them to stabilize sensors and electronics in space. We began using them on Earth in some specialized applications, including portable coolers, wine chillers, and CPU coolers in computers.

However, this technology didn't replace vapor-compression refrigeration due to efficiency constraints and the need to reject heat. Thermoelectric modules are only 5-10% as efficient as vapor-compression systems, and they need heat sinks or fans to give the heat somewhere to go. We've still been pursuing a comfort cooling use of the Peltier effect, and we've gotten closer, but most applications still have the efficiency block. When efficiency isn't a problem, we encounter difficulties with moisture and latent heat removal. Nevertheless, thermoelectric cooling is still making a difference for sensors and in localized cooling applications.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, hello. This is the HVAC school podcast, and I'm Brian. This is the podcast that helps

0:09.5

you remember some things you might have forgotten along the way as well as talks about some

0:13.3

history sometimes. And today we're going to talk about the technology that tried to beat the

0:19.4

compressor, tried or maybe just yet to succeed. But before we get to that,

0:25.8

let's hear from our great brand partners. Carrier and Carrier.com. I've been a carrier dealer

0:31.9

dealer for many years. Carrier has their new green speed extreme super high efficiency heat pumps out on the market now.

0:40.5

Find out more by going to Carrier.com.

0:43.7

Refrigeration technologies and specifically Viper wipes, the all-purpose wipe that is really amazing what it can cut through.

0:53.0

Everything from mastic to oil grease tar, grime, and it's nice on the hands.

0:58.4

Make some nice and soft when you're done.

1:00.2

So that way, you can go home and head out a dancing when you get back to the house.

1:07.0

Find out more at refrigetect.com slash viper dash wipes.

1:11.1

Refraggetech.com slash viper dash wipes. Refraggetech.com slash viper dash wipes.

1:15.8

Copeland and the White Rogers SureSwitch, the multi-voltage replacement contactor

1:21.6

that works for 24 volt, 120 volt, 208 volt, and 208 volt control applications. The sure switch replaces over 100

1:30.6

common contactors thanks to its one plus pole design. It's a sealed contactor that keeps

1:36.5

insects, debris, and moisture out, and it lasts a lot longer than your typical contactor,

1:42.5

up to about five times longer. And honestly,

1:44.9

my opinion, not theirs. I think it'll even be longer than that. It has a few features that protect

1:49.5

your compressor. Brownout protection helps protect the compressor from low voltage conditions.

1:55.4

And a short cycle timer, delay on brake, prevents undue stress on the compressor.

2:01.6

I'm short cycling.

...

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