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Prototype of single ion heat engine created:

Scientists at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) and the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg are
working on a heat engine that consists of just a single ion. Such a nano-heat engine could be far more
efficient than, for example, a car engine or a coal fired power plant. A usual heat engine transforms heat
into utilizable mechanical energy with the corresponding efficiency of an Otto engine amounting to only
about 25 percent, for instance. The proposed nano-heat engine consisting of a single calcium ion would
be much more efficient. The main aim of the research being conducted is to better understand how
thermodynamics works on very small scales. A pilot prototype of such a single-ion heat engine is
currently being constructed at Mainz University.

As the physicists explain in an article recently published in the journal Physical Review Letters , the
efficiency of heat engines powered by thermal heat reservoirs is determined by the second law of
thermodynamics, one of the fundamental concepts in physics. It was as far back as 1824 that Frenchman
Nicolas Carnot calculated the maximum possible efficiency limit of such engines, now known as the
Carnot limit.

In the case of the newly proposed nano-heat engine, the scientists have been theoretically able to
exceed the classic Carnot limit by manipulating the heat baths and exploiting nonequlibrium states.
Calculations and simulations made about a year ago showed for the first time that the thermo-dynamic
flow in an internal combustion engine could be reproduced using individual ions. The idea was to use a
calcium 40 ion, which has a diameter a million times smaller than that of a human hair, for this purpose.
"Individual ions can basically act as the piston and drive shaft or, in other words, represent the entire
engine," explained Johannes Ronagel of the Quantum, Atomic, and Neutron Physics (QUANTUM) work
group of the JGU Institute of Physics. Individual ions have already been captured in Paul traps and, using
laser beams and electrical fields, not only cooled and heated but also compressed. "This means we are
able to manipulate the pulse location distribution for optimum efficiency," added Ronagel.

"Exceeding the Carnot limit for a standard heat engine thus does not violate the second law of
thermodynamics but instead demonstrates that the use of specially prepared, non-thermal heat reservoirs
also makes it possible to further improve efficiency." In their publication, the physicists calculated the
general Carnot limit for this situation. As the mechanical capacity of a single ion machine is extremely
low, it can probably only be used in heating or cooling nano systems.

The intention is now to actually develop the proposed single ion heat engine in initial experiments and
construct a prototype in the laboratory.

In Photo: A single trapped ion in a linear Paul trap with special geometry: The heat engine is being
realized by the divergent bars; the squeezing is being caused by establishing special electrical fields.

Photo Credit: Quantum, Mainz University

Source: Science Codex.

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