4.7 Article

Energy impact of heat pipe-assisted microencapsulated phase change material heat sink for photovoltaic and thermoelectric generator hybrid panel

Journal

RENEWABLE ENERGY
Volume 207, Issue -, Pages 298-308

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.renene.2023.03.042

Keywords

Building -integrated photovoltaic (BIPV); Thermoelectric generator (TEG); Microencapsulated phase change material; (mPCM); Energy harvesting; Waste heat recovery

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As the importance of energy saving increases due to climate change, various IoT sensors are being used in buildings to monitor temperatures, humidity, and energy usage. This study proposes a BIPV-TEG system with improved constructability and heat dissipation efficiency using a heat pipe and mPCM. Field tests showed that the prototype improved power generation efficiency by approximately 2% in the intermediate season and 2.5% in the summer compared to a regular PV panel, and around 3.06 Wh of wasted heat from the building envelope can be recovered annually through a single TEG.
As the importance of energy saving continues to increase owing to climate change, various Internet of Things sensors, related to building temperatures, humidity, and energy usage, are being employed in buildings, such as in building energy management systems. Aiming to satisfy the rapidly increasing electric energy demands of buildings, studies have combined various building-integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) and thermoelectric generators (TEGs) to recover sunlight and heat wasted from building envelopes. However, in most previous studies, active methods for heat rejection were applied to increase the temperature difference between both ends of the TEG and cooling of the solar panel. The actual constructability problems, such as leakage problems, were insufficiently addressed. Therefore, this study proposed a BIPV-TEG system with increased constructability and heat dissipa-tion efficiency using a heat pipe and microencapsulated phase change material (mPCM). In addition, this study analyzed the thermal behaviors and improvements in power generation efficiency through field tests by manufacturing a prototype. The results of the outdoor experiment indicated that the BIPV-TEG-PCM prototype improved power generation efficiency by approximately 2% in the intermediate season and 2.5% in the summer relative to the efficiency of a general PV panel. Moreover, using a single TEG, approximately 3.06 Wh of the heat wasted in the building envelope can be recovered as a form of electricity annually.

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