Fundamental aspects of steady-state conversion of heat to work at the nanoscale
Giuliano Benenti, Giulio Casati, Keiji Saito, and Robert S. Whitney

TL;DR
This review explores the theoretical foundations of steady-state heat to work conversion at the nanoscale, emphasizing quantum effects, transport phenomena, and efficiency metrics in mesoscopic systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of various theories applicable to nanoscale heat engines, integrating quantum mechanics and thermodynamics for steady-state energy conversion.
Findings
Analysis of quantum transport mechanisms
Discussion of thermoelectric efficiency and figure of merit
Evaluation of effects like magnetic fields and single-electron charging
Abstract
In recent years, the study of heat to work conversion has been re-invigorated by nanotechnology. Steady-state devices do this conversion without any macroscopic moving parts, through steady-state flows of microscopic particles such as electrons, photons, phonons, etc. This review aims to introduce some of the theories used to describe these steady-state flows in a variety of mesoscopic or nanoscale systems. These theories are introduced in the context of idealized machines which convert heat into electrical power (heat-engines) or convert electrical power into a heat flow (refrigerators). In this sense, the machines could be categorized as thermoelectrics, although this should be understood to include photovoltaics when the heat source is the sun. As quantum mechanics is important for most such machines, they fall into the field of quantum thermodynamics. In many cases, the machines we…
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