| ▲ | newpavlov 5 hours ago | |
Because it's not economical, the required hardware is unlikely to pay for itself during its lifetime. The gradient is too small (~50C), which means low Carnot efficiency. Additionally, extraction of low-enthalpy energy involves obstruction of heat transfer, meaning lower cooling efficiency. It may have been a different story if we had computer hardware able to efficiently operate at 200-300C. Even steel plants which deal with significantly higher waste heat gradients rarely bother with recovering energy. | ||
| ▲ | soco 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |
> It may have been a different story if we had computer hardware able to efficiently operate at 200-300C. Do I see a market opening here? | ||