4.7 Article

Towards the Carnot efficiency with a novel electrochemical heat engine based on the Carnot cycle: Thermodynamic considerations

Journal

ENERGY
Volume 284, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2023.128577

Keywords

Low-grade heat harvesting; Quasi-Carnot cycle; Thermally regenerative electrochemical cycle; Electrochemical Brayton cycle; Exergy analysis; Thermodynamic cycle

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This study proposes an electrochemical quasi-Carnot cycle (EQCC) for low-grade heat harvesting, addressing the limitations of irreversible losses in emerging continuous electrochemical heat engines. The performance of ideal EQCC is derived mathematically, and the non-ideal EQCC considering irreversible losses is realized by adjusting the current distribution in the system. The results show that the ideal EQCC achieves a Carnot efficiency with a power density of 945 W m-2 under a temperature difference of 18°C, while the optimized non-ideal EQCC reaches a relative efficiency of 55.2% with a maximum power density of 12.6 W m-2.
The efficiency of emerging continuous electrochemical heat engines is limited by large irreversible losses associated with non-isothermal heating and cooling processes. To fundamentally address this limitation, this study proposes for the first time an electrochemical quasi-Carnot cycle (EQCC), in which the temperature of electrolytes is changed by adiabatic processes. Specifically, the EQCC is implemented by four electrochemical reactors with flow battery structures operating under two different conditions. The performance of the ideal EQCC is derived mathematically, and the non-ideal EQCC considering irreversible losses is realized by adjusting the current distribution in the system. Results show that the thermal efficiency of the ideal EQCC is the Carnot efficiency, and its power density could reach 945 W m- 2 under a temperature difference of only 18 & DEG;C. The optimized non-ideal EQCC system performs a relative efficiency to the Carnot efficiency of 55.2% corresponding to the maximum power density of 12.6 W m- 2, which can reach 81.8% by reducing the power density to 7.0 W m- 2. Furthermore, the application potential of EQCC is demonstrated by its competitive performance compared with the thermally regenerative electrochemical cycle and electrochemical Brayton cycle. The EQCC proposed in this study provides a novel idea for low-grade heat harvesting.

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