Heat-to-current conversion of low-grade heat from a thermocapacitive cycle by supercapacitors

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Abstract

Thermal energy is abundantly available, and especially low-grade heat is often wasted in industrial processes as a by-product. Tapping into this vast energy reservoir with cost-attractive technologies may become a key element for the transition to an energy-sustainable economy and society. We propose a novel heat-to-current converter which is based on the temperature dependence of the cell voltage of charged supercapacitors. Using a commercially available supercapacitor, we observed a thermal cell-voltage rise of around 0.6 mV K-1 over a temperature window of 0 °C to 65°C. Within our theoretical model, this can be used to operate a Stirling-like charge-voltage cycle whose efficiency is competitive to the most-efficient thermoelectric (Seebeck) engines. Our proposed heat-to-current converter is built from cheap materials, contains no moving parts, and could operate with a plethora of electrolytes which can be chosen for optimal performance at specific working temperatures. Therefore, this heat-to-current converter is interesting for small-scale, domestic, and industrial applications.

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Härtel, A., Janssen, M., Weingarth, D., Presser, V., & Van Roij, R. (2015). Heat-to-current conversion of low-grade heat from a thermocapacitive cycle by supercapacitors. Energy and Environmental Science, 8(8), 2396–2401. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5ee01192b

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