Abstract

The trade-off between large power output, high efficiency and small fluctuations in the operation of heat engines has recently received interest in the context of thermodynamic uncertainty relations (TURs). Here we provide a concrete illustration of this trade-off by theoretically investigating the operation of a quantum point contact (QPC) with an energy-dependent transmission function as a steady-state thermoelectric heat engine. As a starting point, we review and extend previous analysis of the power production and efficiency. Thereafter the power fluctuations and the bound jointly imposed on the power, efficiency, and fluctuations by the TURs are analyzed as additional performance quantifiers. We allow for arbitrary smoothness of the transmission probability of the QPC, which exhibits a close to step-like dependence in energy, and consider both the linear and the non-linear regime of operation. It is found that for a broad range of parameters, the power production reaches nearly its theoretical maximum value, with efficiencies more than half of the Carnot efficiency and at the same time with rather small fluctuations. Moreover, we show that by demanding a non-zero power production, in the linear regime a stronger TUR can be formulated in terms of the thermoelectric figure of merit. Interestingly, this bound holds also in a wide parameter regime beyond linear response for our QPC device.

Highlights

  • Nanoscale thermodynamics has attracted considerable attention during the last three decades.Key motivations are the prospect of on-chip cooling and power production as well as an enhanced thermoelectric performance arising from unique properties of nanoscale systems, such as quantum size effects and strongly energy-dependent transport properties [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • These results clearly show the promising opportunities of step-shaped energy-dependent transmissions, as they can possibly be realized in quantum point contacts (QPC), for thermoelectric power production

  • We have reviewed and extended the analysis of a QPC device, with a transmission probability with a smoothed step-like energy-dependence, as a steady-state thermoelectric heat engine

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Summary

Introduction

Nanoscale thermodynamics has attracted considerable attention during the last three decades. We focus on the non-linear-response regime and analyze the output power and the efficiency for different parameter regimes, varying the smoothness of the step in the transmission probability of the QPC.

Model System and Transport Theory
Quantum Point Contact
Non-Linear-Transport Theory
Thermodynamic Laws and Performance Quantifiers
Linear-Response Regime
Power Production
Maximum Power
Efficiency
Maximum Efficiency
Power-Efficiency Relations
Power Fluctuations and Inverse Fano Factor
Thermodynamic Uncertainty Relation
Findings
Conclusions and Outlook
Full Text
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