A magnetised needle fixed on a vertical rod passing through its centre can oscillate in a horizontal plane. Initially, the needle points towards the North. It is mounted in a frame consisting of two different metals A and B, of length \ell each, forming a loop in a vertical plane (Fig. 11.10). Heating the junction (1) at temperature T+ΔT and keeping the junction (2) at temperature T causes a deviation of the needle. This is due to the magnetic induction field B generated by the electric current density j_q that circulates in the frame. This is the
effect that Seebeck first observed. The thermoelectric materials A and B that form the loop
have a length \ell and a cross-section surface area A, which can be written as,
\ell =\int_{0}^{\ell }{d r.\hat{x} } and A =\int_{S}{d S.\hat{x} }
where \hat{x} is a unit vector oriented anticlockwise along the loop (Fig. 11.10), and the infinitesimal length and surface vectors dr and dS are oriented in the same direction. The temperature difference between the hot and cold ends is given by,
\Delta T = \int_{0}^{\ell }{d r .(-\nabla T_A )} =\int_{0}^{\ell }{d r .\nabla T_B }.
The electric potential differences \Delta \varphi _A and \Delta \varphi _B between the hot and cold ends are given by,
\Delta \varphi _A = \int_{0}^{\ell }{d r .(-\nabla T_A )}.
\Delta \varphi _B = \int_{0}^{\ell }{d r .\nabla T_B }.
In a stationary state, the electric charge conservation implies that the electric current densities are the same in each material, i.e. j_q = j_{qA} = j_{qB} . The electric current I flowing through materials A and B is the integral of the electric current densities j_{qA} and j_{qB} over the cross-section area A,
I= \int_{S}{j _{qA} .dS} = \int_{S}{j _{qB} .dS}.
1. When the system is in a stationary state, determine the condition imposed on the electric current density j_q.
2. Determine the intensity I of the electric current density circulating in the loop, in the limit where the chemical potential gradients ∇μ_A and ∇μ_B of the electrons in the materials A and B are negligible compared to the gradients of the electrostatic potentials \nabla (q_e\varphi _A) and \nabla (q_e\varphi _B) . Express your result in terms of the electrostatic potential differences \Delta \varphi _A and \Delta \varphi _B in materials A and B between junctions (1) and (2).
3. Express the electric current I circulating in the loop in terms of the empirical coefficients
σ_A, σ_B, ε_A and ε_B, the length \ell and the temperature difference ΔT.