鈥婲ew technology turns waste heat into electricity, defies physical limit
A team of engineers and material scientists in the听Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 has developed a new technology听to turn thermal radiation into electricity in a way that literally teases the basic law of thermal physics.
The breakthrough was discovered by the听, led by Assistant Professor听Longji Cui. Their work, in collaboration with researchers from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, was recently听.听
The group says their research has the potential to revolutionize manufacturing industries by increasing power generation without the need for high temperature heat sources or expensive materials. They can store clean energy, lower carbon emissions and harvest heat from geothermal, nuclear and solar radiation plants across the globe.
In other words, Cui and his team have solved an age-old puzzle: how to do more with less.
鈥淗eat is a renewable energy source that is often overlooked,鈥 Cui said. 鈥淭wo-thirds of all energy that we use is turned into heat. Think of energy storage and electricity generation that doesn鈥檛 involve fossil fuels. We can recover some of this wasted thermal energy and use it to make clean electricity.鈥
Breaking the physical limit in vacuum
High-temperature industrial processes and renewable energy harvesting techniques often utilize a thermal energy conversion method called thermophotovoltaics (TPV). This method harnesses thermal energy from high temperature heat sources to generate electricity.听
But existing TPV devices have one constraint: Planck鈥檚 thermal radiation law.听
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PhD student Mohammad Habibi showcasing one of the group's TPV cells used for power generation. Habibi was the leader of both the theory and experimentation of this groundbreaking research.
鈥淧lanck鈥檚 law, one of most fundamental laws in thermal physics, puts a limit on the available thermal energy that can be harnessed from a high temperature source at any given temperature,鈥 said Cui, also a faculty member affiliated with the听Materials Science and Engineering Program and the听Center for Experiments on Quantum Materials. 鈥淩esearchers have tried to work closer or overcome this limit using many ideas, but current methods are overly complicated to manufacture the device, costly and unscalable.鈥
That鈥檚 where Cui鈥檚 group comes in. By designing a unique and compact TPV device that can fit in a human hand, the team was able to overcome the vacuum limit defined by Planck鈥檚 law and double the yielded power density previously achieved by conventional TPV designs.听
鈥淲hen we were exploring this technology, we had theoretically predicted a high level of enhancement. But we weren鈥檛 sure what it would look like in a real world experiment,鈥 said Mohammad Habibi, a PhD student in Cui鈥檚 lab and leader of both the theory and experiment of this research. 鈥淎fter performing the experiment and processing the data, we saw the enhancement ourselves and knew it was something great.鈥
The zero-vacuum gap solution using glass
The research emerged, in part, from the group鈥檚 desire to challenge the limits. But in order to succeed, they had to modify existing TPV designs and take a different approach.
鈥淭here are two major performance metrics when it comes to TPV devices: efficiency and power density,鈥 said Cui. 鈥淢ost people have focused on efficiency. However, our goal was to increase power.鈥
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The zero-vacuum gap TPV device, designed by the Cui Research Group.
To do so, the team implemented what鈥檚 called a 鈥渮ero-vacuum gap鈥 solution into the design of their TPV device. Unlike other TPV models that feature a vacuum or gas-filled gap between the thermal source and the solar cell, their design features an insulated, high index and infrared-transparent spacer made out of just glass.听
This creates a high power density channel that allows thermal heat waves to travel through the device without losing strength, drastically improving power generation. The material is also very cheap, one of the device鈥檚 central calling cards.
鈥淧reviously, when people wanted to enhance the power density, they would have to increase temperature. Let鈥檚 say an increase from 1,500 C to 2,000 C. Sometimes even higher, which eventually becomes not tolerable and unsafe for the whole energy system,鈥 Cui explained. 鈥淣ow we can work in lower temperatures that are compatible with most industrial processes, all while still generating similar electrical power than before. Our device operates at 1,000 C and yields power equivalent to 1,400 C in existing gap-integrated TPV devices.鈥
The group also says their glass design is just the tip of the iceberg. Other materials could help the device produce even more power.
鈥淭his is the first demonstration of this new TPV concept,鈥 explained Habibi. 鈥淏ut if we used another cheap material with the same properties, like amorphous silicon, there is a potential for an even higher, nearly 20 times more increase in power density. That鈥檚 what we are looking to explore next.鈥
The broader commercial impact
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Assistant Professor Longji Cui (middle) and the Cui Research Group.听
Cui says their novel TPV devices would make its largest impact by enabling portable power generators and decarbonizing heavy emissions industries. Once optimized, they have the power to transform high-temperature industrial processes, such as the production of glass, steel and cement with cheaper and cleaner electricity.
鈥淥ur device uses commercial technology that already exists. It can scale up naturally to be implemented in these industries,鈥 said Cui. 鈥淲e can recover wasted heat and can provide the energy storage they need with this device at a low working temperature.
鈥淲e have a patent pending based on this technology and it is very exciting to push this renewable innovation forward within the field of power generation and heat recovery.鈥澨