Difference between revisions of "Power density"
From apm
(→Related: added * Energy density) |
(added external links to wikipedia pages about surface and volumetric power density) |
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* [[Higher throughput of smaller machinery]] | * [[Higher throughput of smaller machinery]] | ||
* [[High performance of gem-gum technology]] | * [[High performance of gem-gum technology]] | ||
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+ | == External Links == | ||
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+ | Wikipedia | ||
+ | * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_power_density Surface power density] – W/m² | ||
+ | * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_density Power density] – W/m³ |
Revision as of 10:32, 6 August 2022
(wiki-TODO: Add reference to relevant Nanosystems section)
There are two kinds of power densities
- aerial power density
- volumetric power density
(TODO: In how far can they be made comparable? And is there a way to get an intuitive grasp on them?)
The power densities mentioned in Nanosystems seem to exceed the maximum what seems possibly of force times speed
in mechanical energy transmission cables.
(TODO: Resolve this mystery)
Related
- Energy conversion – especially high max power in electromechanical converters (to check)
- Energy density
High power energy transmission as a combination of:
- Chemical energy transmission
- Mechanical energy transmission
- Entropic energy transmission
- Thermal energy transmission – other quite different constraints here
External Links
Wikipedia
- Surface power density – W/m²
- Power density – W/m³