4.8 Article

Atmospheric Hygroscopic Ionogels with Dynamically Stable Cooling Interfaces Enable a Durable Thermoelectric Performance Enhancement

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 49, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202103937

Keywords

atmospheric water harvesting; dynamically stable cooling interfaces; evaporative cooling; hygroscopic ionogels; thermoelectric performance enhancement

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [51803226, 52073295]
  2. Sino-German Mobility Program [M-0424]
  3. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences [QYZDB-SSW-SLH036]
  4. Bureau of International Cooperation, Chinese Academy of Sciences [174433KYSB20170061]
  5. K. C. Wong Education 6Foundation [GJTD-2019-13]

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The use of atmospheric hygroscopic ionogels (RIGs) in thermoelectric generator (TEG) systems as a self-sustained and durable cooling material can effectively enhance the TEG's thermoelectric performance while addressing issues with traditional hydrogel coolers. RIGs, with superior hygroscopicity and favorable adhesion, achieve higher heat dissipation and provide a sustainable and stable cooling mechanism for TEG.
In thermoelectric generator (TEG) systems, heat dissipation from their cold sides is an accessible, low-cost, and effective way to increase the temperature gap for their thermoelectric performance enhancement. Although significant efforts have been dedicated mediated by hygroscopic hydrogel coolers as self-sustained alternatives for effective heat removal, it still remains a challenge for overcoming instabilities in their cooling process. The inevitable mechanical deformation of these conventional hydrogels induced by excessive water desorption may cause a detached cooling interface with the targeted substrates, leading to undesirable cooling failure. Herein, a self-sustained and durable evaporative cooling approach for TEG enabled by atmospheric hygroscopic ionogels (RIGs) with stable interfaces to efficiently improve its thermoelectric performance is proposed. Owing to its superior hygroscopicity, the RIGs can achieve higher heat dissipation for TEG through water evaporation than that of common commercial metal heat sinks. Moreover, its favorable adhesion enables the RIG closely interact with the TEG surface either in static or dynamic conditions for a durable thermoelectric performance enhancement. It is believed that such a self-sustained evaporative cooling strategy based on the RIG will have great implications for the enhancement of TEG's efficiency, demonstrating a great promise in intermittent thermal-energy utilizations.

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