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COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Researchers have invented a new material that will
make cars even more efficient, by converting heat wasted through engine
exhaust into electricity.
In the current issue of the journal
Science, they describe a
material with twice the efficiency of anything currently on the market.
The same technology could work in power generators and heat pumps, said
project leader
Joseph Heremans, Ohio Eminent Scholar in Nanotechnology at Ohio State
University.
Scientists call such materials
thermoelectric
materials, and they rate the materials' efficiency based on how much heat
they can convert into electricity at a given temperature.
Previously, the most efficient material used commercially in
thermoelectric power generators was an alloy called sodium-doped lead
telluride, which had a rating of 0.71. The new material, thallium-doped
lead telluride, has a rating of 1.5 -- more than twice that of the
previous leader.
What's more important to Heremans is that the new material is most
effective between 450 and 950 degrees Fahrenheit -- a typical temperature
range for power systems such as automobile engines.
Some experts argue that only about 25 percent of the energy produced by
a typical gasoline engine is used to move a car or power its accessories,
and nearly 60 percent is lost through waste heat -- much of which escapes
in engine exhaust.
A thermoelectric (TE) device can capture some of that waste heat,
Heremans said. It would also make a practical addition to an automobile,
because it has no moving parts to wear out or break down.
"The material does all the work. It produces electrical power just like
conventional heat engines -- steam engines, gas or diesel engines -- that
are coupled to electrical generators, but it uses electrons as the working
fluids instead of water or gases, and makes electricity directly."
"Thermoelectrics are also very small," he added. "I like to say that TE
converters compare to other heat engines like the transistor compares to
the vacuum tube."
The engineers took a unique strategy to design this new material.
To maximize the amount of electricity produced by a TE material,
engineers would normally try to limit the amount of heat that can pass
through it without being captured and converted to electricity. So the
typical strategy for making a good thermoelectric material is to lower its
thermal conductivity.
In Heremans' lab, he used to work to lower the thermal conductivity by
building nanometer-sized structures such as nanowires into materials. A
nanometer is one billionth of a meter.
Those nanostructured materials are not very stable, are very difficult
to make in large quantities, and are difficult to connect with
conventional electronic circuits and external heat sources.
For this new material, he and his colleagues took a different strategy:
they left out the fancy nanostructures, and instead focused on how to
convert the maximum amount of heat that was trapped in the material
naturally.
To do this, they took advantage of some new ideas in quantum mechanics.
Heremans pointed to
a 2006 paper published by other researchers in the journal Physical Review
Letters, which suggested that elements such as thallium and tellurium
could interact on a quantum-mechanical level to create a resonance between
the thallium electrons and those in the host lead telluride thermoelectric
material, depending on the bonds between the atoms.
"It comes down to a peculiar behavior of an electron in a thallium atom
when it has tellurium neighbors," he said. "We'd been working for 10 years
to engineer this kind of behavior using different kinds of nanostructured
materials, but with limited success. Then I saw this paper, and I knew we
could do the same thing we'd been trying to do with nanostructures, but
with this bulk semiconductor instead."
Heremans designed the new material with Vladimir Jovovic, who did this
work for his doctoral thesis in the Department of Mechanical Engineering
at Ohio State. Researchers at
Osaka University --
Ken Kurosaki, Anek Charoenphakdee, and
Shinsuke Yamanaka -- created samples of the material for testing. Then
researchers at the
California Institute of Technology --
G.
Jeffrey Snyder, Eric S. Toberer, and Ali Saramat -- tested the
material at high temperatures. Heremans and Jovovic tested it at low
temperatures and provided experimental proof that the physical mechanism
they postulated was indeed at work.
The team found that near 450 degrees Fahrenheit, the material converted
heat to electricity with an efficiency rating of about 0.75 -- close to
that of sodium doped telluride. But as the temperature rose, so did the
efficiency of the new material. It peaked at 950 degrees Fahrenheit, with
a rating of 1.5.
Heremans' team is continuing to work on this patent-pending technology.
"We hope to go much further. I think it should be quite possible to
apply other lessons learned from thermoelectric nanotechnology to boost
the rating by another factor of two -- that's what we're shooting for
now," he said.
This research was funded by the BSST
Corporation; the State of Ohio Department of Development’s
Center for
Photovoltaic Innovation and Commercialization at Ohio State
University; the Beckman
Institute; the Swedish Bengt Lundqvist Minne Foundation; and
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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