logo
Loading...
Colossal thermo-hydro-electrochemical voltage generation for self-sustainable operation of electronics
Engineering and TechnologyNature Communications

Colossal thermo-hydro-electrochemical voltage generation for self-sustainable operation of electronics

Y. Zhang, A. Sohn, et al.

Discover an innovative thermo-hydro-electrochemical method that significantly boosts thermal-to-electrical energy conversion, achieved through low-cost materials. This groundbreaking research, conducted by Yufan Zhang, Ahrum Sohn, Anirban Chakraborty, and Choongho Yu, paves the way for harnessing wasted thermal energy more effectively.... show more
Abstract
Thermoelectrics are suited to converting dissipated heat into electricity for operating electronics, but the small voltage (-0.1 mV K⁻¹) from the Seebeck effect has been one of the major hurdles in practical implementation. Here an approach with thermo-hydro-electrochemical effects can generate a large thermal-to-electrical energy conversion factor (TtoE factor), -87 mV K⁻¹ with low-cost carbon steel electrodes and a solid-state polyeletrolyte made of polyaniline and polystyrene sulfonate (PANI:PSS). We discovered that the thermo-diffusion of water in PANI:PSS under a temperature gradient induced less (or more) water on the hotter (or colder) side, raising (or lowering) the corrosion overpotential in the hotter (or colder) side and thereby generating output power between the electrodes. Our findings are expected to facilitate subsequent research for further increasing the TtoE factor and utilizing dissipated thermal energy.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Sep 06, 2021
Authors
Yufan Zhang, Ahrum Sohn, Anirban Chakraborty, Choongho Yu
Tags
thermoelectricenergy conversionlow-cost materialspolyelectrolytethermal energy
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny