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Imagine it's hot and humid outside. You see a pedal-powered air conditioning booth. You get in the booth, close the door, and start pedaling.

The pedals are connected to a shaft-driven (automotive-style) air conditioning compressor via chain and sprockets. The system is sized and geared to work at a sustainable power and cadence for a moderately fit person. (Say, around 100 watts at 80 crank RPM.) The pedals also drive two fans, one each for the evaporator (inside the booth) and the condenser (outside the booth, with a drive shaft poking through the exterior wall). There are no electrical generators or motors -- the system is entirely mechanical to minimize energy loss. Inside, the cooled breeze is aimed at the cyclist. The booth is well-insulated from the environment (like a refrigerator). The booth is stationary (it does not move). To avoid suffocating, the cyclist breathes through a snorkel that vents to the outside.

Could this work at all, given the state of air conditioning technology? Is it feasible to build a system that would keep our cyclist at a comfortable temperature, or would they be cooked inside from the trapped heat of exertion?

I want to say it's feasible, here is why. This figure (from this book) suggests that when a human pedals to make 147 watts of mechanical energy, they also produce about 400-500 watts of heat. This allows us to answer a related question: Can an air conditioner reject 500 watts of heat with 147 watts of input energy? Yes, I think so! That requires a Coefficient of Performance (CoP) of 3.40 (500 / 147), which is easily within the capability of a modern air conditioning system. On the 'web site where you buy things', you'll find mini split AC systems with a SEER of 20, which appears to convert to a CoP of 5.87. Is it possible to build a smaller pedal-driven system with similar efficiency? Am I failing to consider anything important?

Chris Martin
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    Are we ignoring the fact you have to move that weight? – DKNguyen Aug 23 '21 at 03:54
  • @DKNguyen the booth is stationary; edited to clarify. – Chris Martin Aug 23 '21 at 04:08
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    Well if you see this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CGAhWgkKlHI then it says that a ridiculously low amount of power is actually needed to keep something cold as long as it is insulated. Your biggest loss of efficiency just might be the breathing tube (as well as the fact that the thing powering the fridge is inside the fridge rather than outside). 600 Watt-hours per day. – DKNguyen Aug 23 '21 at 04:45
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    I would like to breathe cool fresh air . Not hot fresh air direct from outside via a snorkel. – Solar Mike Aug 23 '21 at 04:49
  • with evaporative cooling, sure. but you need water. with a closed cycle, no, since the pedal output generates greater heat in the body – Pete W Aug 23 '21 at 11:30
  • The SEER of 20+ for a split unit is because of the changes due to seasons. These units are very good at less than full load cooling because they use variable speed compressors & blowers. You should probably expect to get significantly less than that due to speed variation plus we are running at design load. – Tiger Guy Aug 23 '21 at 13:06
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    Even if it did work, is it worth the metabolic thermogenesis induced by the pedaling? – Thomas Markov Aug 23 '21 at 13:22
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    I think the comments are missing the point. This is an interesting hypothetical. – Drew Aug 26 '21 at 07:18
  • Human body's power output (for an average man) is roughly 60W. In the San Jose science museum they have a bicycle arrangement with a dynamo and your best effort can light up a flickering 60W bulb. The cyclist uses much of the power for overcoming road friction, little is left for airconditioning. It doesn't matter how clever the arrangement is, at some point the cyclist will be out of energy too. Heat dissipated by the body will make matters worse. A horsepower is 746W and you can easily find out how many humans = a horse. Besides Heat is measured in J not Watts. – Syed Sep 13 '21 at 05:50

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The thermodynamic efficiency of a cyclist is estimated to be 20-30% (http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2010/ph240/stetler1/)

The thermodynamic efficiency of an airconditioner varies, maxes out at 450%. So, multiply the two together and you are on a knife edge as to whether a cyclist would be cooled or boiled in your booth.

Greg Locock
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