Man Powered Cooling and Flying
Thoughts regarding Air Conditioning...
MAN POWERED COOLING AND FLYING
Values based Design
The designs of cars, airplanes and houses are determined by cheap energy. When our own bodies supply the energy, the forms change. The bicycle, canoe and man powered Gossamer Condor are interesting examples of design when energy is expensive.
Let us also build man powered air conditioners. It should be interesting for Nature offers no examples; she only cools passively. Twenty-five years after the invention of the Condor, we have not graduated from cars and highways to commute silently like so many giant moths, but a man cooler might have great consequences.
Until recently man could not fly by his own power. He could fall, he could glide, he could rise on thermals, but until Paul McCready and the Gossamer Condor he could not fly, as birds do, by his own efforts. It wasn’t for lack of trying. Old pictures show winged men leaping, racing and crashing, vainly trying to get airborne. A large prize for flying went unclaimed from 1959 until McCready’s success in 1977.
We only cool ourselves passively. Passive cooling is giving heat to someplace cooler; by convection, if the air is cooler; by radiation, if cool is in sight; or, mysteriously and around corners, water will accept heat at temperatures far below that of the air if there is no traffic jam of humidity. Evaporation is why panting and sweating works so well to cool us animals. Water vapor finally condenses in a cold cloud or on the earth as dew.
How thing work
The pilot sits on a bicycle seat pedaling a propeller to
drive the 96’ wing span, 70 lb. airplane.
The cooler pedals a compressor on a similar seat in an insulated cabin
that is covered inside and out with finned heat exchangers. Most air conditioners need 1 unit of work to
pump out three units of heat. We wish
the COP was 10 not 3. Then anyone would
have a chance to pump out as much heat as he created on the treadmill, for most
of us are at least 10% efficient.
Pedaling or cranking
the compressor on an air conditioner, lifts the heat to however high a
temperature necessary to flow into surrounding air. This is real cooling, no
relying on Nature’s tricks. Sweating is
no more real cooling than gliding is flying.
Passive flying and cooling work only as long as one’s weight or heat is
headed for someplace lower.
The challenge to fly is different than to cool. Both depend on simple ratios –
power-to-weight for flying and power-to-heat for cooling. While the athlete can
affect his power-to-weight by trying hard, a burst of effort guarantees nothing
for his power-to-heat ratio. More effort brings more heat, too. A flyer might
fail on the cooler.
Making it all add up
Washing out on the cooler is a familiar failure – like all
those whose body does not obey the mind, the person who can’t stop blushing, or
who can’t sleep, or worse, suffers an episode of embarrassing impotence. Imagine the desperate sinking pilot who
discovers he becomes heavier by pumping harder.
The problem can be simply stated. To cool, the COP of the air conditioner
multiplied by the efficiency of the man powering it must be greater than one.
The ASHRAE Handbook states people have efficiencies of 10%
to 20%, and sales literature for air conditioners talk of COPs as high as
4.4. With a COP of 4.4 even a 20%
efficient man could not crank or pump a standard air conditioner and cool. He does 10,000 ft. lbs. of work, adds 50,000
ft lbs. of heat, but pumps out only 44,000 ft. lbs. of heat. The temperature in the cubicle would rise
higher and higher, yet the numbers are close enough to make one think with more
investment in the air conditioner and training for the man - things would work.
Standard conditions should be air temperature above body temperature, 98o F.
The matching of man and machine will be interesting. The man can’t get the job done by just being big and strong, or trying hard. He must be thermally potent, able to produce lots of power with little heat.
Our lot
The machine is the passive partner and must be beautifully made with an efficient compressor and large heat exchangers. Like all joint efforts, there will be recriminations if things don’t work.
Building a man powered man cooler is less dramatic, but
finally more interesting than flying.
Nature flies, but she leaves all her cooling to passive evaporation,
conduction and radiation. Where she must
have a high metabolism at high ambient temperatures, as with birds, she ups the
body temperature and continues to cool passively. Doubtless, we will come to reflect on this if
we build man coolers.
First man coolers
Perhaps the first man coolers will use elastic bands, liquid
pistons or other Stirling engine components, not Freon refrigerants. They may be as different from conventional
air conditioners as the Condor is from a jet airplane. After man coolers have
been made to suit even the least efficient of us, someone will accidentally
discover the real reward for our efforts.
This invention made to cool man wants to run backwards, especially if
its radiator is struck by sun.
Although some would doubtless try to pass laws against it, God’s
thermodynamic laws would bless man coolers fed cheap, low temperature heat to
power households.
The man cooler, dizzy, turning backwards, but forever
obedient, could yield lots of work on a diet of 160oF heat
discharged at 80oF.
No one could build these engines as engines; they will be
too heavy, too large and too strange looking, ridicule would defeat their
designer. They can appear accidentally
as I have explained.
Steve Baer
September 2004