4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Thermoelectric Generators Based on Ionic Liquids

Journal

JOURNAL OF ELECTRONIC MATERIALS
Volume 47, Issue 6, Pages 3193-3197

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11664-018-6175-z

Keywords

Ionic liquid; thermoelectric generator; environmentally friendly; energy harvesting; body/waste heat; Seebeck coefficient

Funding

  1. Haute Ecole Specialisee de Suisse occidentale, HES-SO Interdisciplinary Project [011-2015-PI]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [731976']
  3. H2020-FETPROACT Grant [731976 Magenta]

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Looking at energy harvesting using body or waste heat for portable electronic or on-board devices, Ionic liquids are interesting candidates as thermoactive materials in thermoelectric generators (TEGs) because of their outstanding properties. Two different kinds of ionic liquid, with alkylammonium and choline as cations, were studied, whereby different anions and redox couples were combined. This study focussed on the intention to find non-hazardous and environmentally friendly ionic liquids for TEGs to be selected among the thousands that can potentially be used. Seebeck coefficients (SEs) as high as - 15 mV/K were measured, in a particular case for an electrode temperature difference of 20 K. The bottleneck of our TEG device is still the abundance of negative SE liquids matching the internal resistance with the existing positive SE-liquids at series connections. In this paper, we show further progress in finding increased negative SE liquids. For current extraction from the TEG, the ionic liquid must be blended with a redox couple, allowing carrier exchange in a cyclic process under a voltage which is incuced by the asymmetry of the generator in terms of hot and cold electrodes. In our study, two types of redox pairs were tested. It was observed that a high SE of an ionic liquid/redox blend is not a sufficient condition for high power output. It appears that more complex effects between the ionic liquid and the electrode determine the magnitude of the final current/power output. The physico-chemical understanding of such a TEG cell is not yet available.

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