"Cooling by heating" - demonstrating the significance of the longitudinal specific heat
Jon J. Papini, Jeppe C. Dyre, Tage Christensen

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that heating a solid or glass-forming liquid sphere can cause a transient cooling effect inside due to differences between specific heats, with analytical solutions and experimental confirmation.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of longitudinal specific heat c_l and shows its significance in transient thermal stresses and cooling effects in spheres, especially near the glass transition.
Findings
Transient cooling of about 5 mK in the sphere center at glass transition.
Analytical solutions for thermoviscoelastic equations are provided.
Experimental confirmation with glucose sphere supports the theoretical predictions.
Abstract
Heating a solid sphere at the surface induces mechanical stresses inside the sphere. If a finite amount of heat is supplied, the stresses gradually disappear as temperature becomes homogeneous throughout the sphere. We show that before this happens, there is a temporary lowering of pressure and density in the interior of the sphere, inducing a transient lowering of the temperature here. For ordinary solids this effect is small because c_p is almost equal to c_V. For fluent liquids the effect is negligible because their dynamic shear modulus vanishes. For a liquid at its glass transition, however, the effect is generally considerably larger than in solids. This paper presents analytical solutions of the relevant coupled thermoviscoelastic equations. In general, there is a difference between the isobaric specific heat, c_p, measured at constant isotropic pressure and the longitudinal…
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