Direct thermal charging cell for converting low-grade heat to electricity.
Xun WangYu-Ting HuangChang LiuKaiyu MuKa Ho LiSijia WangYuan YangLei WangChia-Hung SuShien-Ping FengPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Efficient low-grade heat recovery can help to reduce greenhouse gas emission as over 70% of primary energy input is wasted as heat, but current technologies to fulfill the heat-to-electricity conversion are still far from optimum. Here we report a direct thermal charging cell, using asymmetric electrodes of a graphene oxide/platinum nanoparticles cathode and a polyaniline anode in Fe2+/Fe3+ redox electrolyte via isothermal heating operation. When heated, the cell generates voltage via a temperature-induced pseudocapacitive effect of graphene oxide and a thermogalvanic effect of Fe2+/Fe3+, and then discharges continuously by oxidizing polyaniline and reducing Fe3+ under isothermal heating till Fe3+ depletion. The cell can be self-regenerated when cooled down. Direct thermal charging cells attain a temperature coefficient of 5.0 mV K-1 and heat-to-electricity conversion efficiency of 2.8% at 70 °C (21.4% of Carnot efficiency) and 3.52% at 90 °C (19.7% of Carnot efficiency), outperforming other thermoelectrochemical and thermoelectric systems.
Keyphrases
- low grade
- single cell
- high grade
- cell therapy
- heat stress
- reduced graphene oxide
- induced apoptosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- signaling pathway
- high resolution
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell death
- stress induced
- ion batteries
- nucleic acid
- high glucose
- tandem mass spectrometry