Heat-to-current conversion of low-grade heat from a thermocapacitive cycle by supercapacitors

Publication date

2015

Authors

Härtel, Andreas
Janssen, MISNI 0000000493258624
Weingarth, Daniel
Presser, Volker
van Roij, RenéISNI 0000000392993654

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Thermal energy is abundantly available, and especially low-grade heat is often wasted in industrial processes as a by-product. Tapping into this vast energy reservoir with cost-attractive technologies may become a key element for the transition to an energy-sustainable economy and society. We propose a novel heat-to-current converter which is based on the temperature dependence of the cell voltage of charged supercapacitors. Using a commercially available supercapacitor, we observed a thermal cell-voltage rise of around 0.6 mV K-1 over a temperature window of 0 degrees C to 65 degrees C. Within our theoretical model, this can be used to operate a Stirling-like charge-voltage cycle whose efficiency is competitive to the most-efficient thermoelectric (Seebeck) engines. Our proposed heat-to-current converter is built from cheap materials, contains no moving parts, and could operate with a plethora of electrolytes which can be chosen for optimal performance at specific working temperatures. Therefore, this heat-to-current converter is interesting for small-scale, domestic, and industrial applications.

Keywords

DOUBLE-LAYER CAPACITORS, ELECTROCHEMICAL SYSTEM, FLOW-ELECTRODES, THERMAL-ENERGY, DEIONIZATION, GENERATION, CARBON, BATTERY, Taverne, SDG 9 - Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure

Citation

Härtel, A, Janssen, M, Weingarth, D, Presser, V & van Roij, R 2015, 'Heat-to-current conversion of low-grade heat from a thermocapacitive cycle by supercapacitors', Energy and Environmental Science, vol. 8, no. 8, pp. 2396-2401. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5ee01192b