Recent Concepts in Thermoelectric Power Generation

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Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Energy Harvesting 2011 IET London, Savoy Place 07 February 2011

Thermoelectric Energy Harvesting

Gao Min ([email protected])

Cardiff Thermoelectric Laboratory School of Engineering, Cardiff University

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Outline •

Characteristics of Thermoelectric Devices



Suitability for Energy Harvesting Application?



Recent R&D efforts and Opportunities

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Conversion Efficiency of Thermoelectrics 0.4

Tc=300K

ZT=5

Efficiency

0.3

ZT=3 ZT=2

0.2

N

P

ZT=1 0.1

0.0 300

ZT=0.5 400

500

600

700

800

Temperature

900 1000

 2 T ZT  

- The conversion efficiency is still relatively low compared with conventional (mechanical) heat engines.

- The most efficient materials are semiconductor alloys based on Bi2Te3 (300K), PbTe (550K) and SiGe (1100K).

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

T =300 =360 K =380 =400 =420 c h

14

0.06

P/NA



0.05

T=120 K

12

0.04

10 100 K

8

0.03

80 K

6 4

0.02

60 K

0.01

2 0

0

1

2

3

4

Thermoelement length (mm)

5

0.00

1.4

Power output (W)

16

Conversion efficiency

Power-per-unit-area (mW/mm2)

Power Output and Optimization Theory

1.2

Cold side

optimised

1.0 Hot side

0.8

P-type Peltier thermoelement

N-type Peltier thermoelement

0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0

Best commercially available module

0

20

40

60

80

Temperature difference (K)

• Power-per-unit area can be improved (at expense of a slight reduction in conversion efficiency. • 0.1 W/cm2 has been achieved at T=100K, resulting in a cost of £2/W • 10 mW/mm2 (i.e., 1 W/cm2) may be achievable at T=100K.

100

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Is Thermoelectrics Economically Viable? • Waste heat recovery • Low power devices • Symbiotic systems

(Technological push)

Any T Reliable Scalable Noise free Environmental ADVANTAGES

Low efficiency CO2 reduction

(Market pull)

DISADVANTAGES

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Hot Water TEG

Th = 85 oC, Tc = 15 oC P = 80W, h = 3.0% Cardiff University, 1999

Cost-per-kilowatt-hour (0.01£/kW.h)

Thermoelectric Waste Heat Recovery Power-per-unit-area (kW/m2) 60 50 40 30 20 10

15.0 14.0 13.0 11.0 8.0

5.0

1.5

2.0p/kWh

C

CM C  F pT  1.0p/kWh

Fuel cost at 0.5p/kWh

Fuel cost is essentially free

0 0.020 0.025 0.030 0.035 0.040 0.045 0.050 0.055 0.060

Conversion efficiency When thermal input is free, the system should be optimized to obtain a large power-per-unit-area (as long as sufficient heat dissipation can be achieved). Theoretically, £0.04/kWh is achievable.

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Demonstrating Fuel Economy Benefit of Exhaust Energy Recovery Sept 2010

March 2011

Combustion

100%

33% Mobility & Accessories

38% Engine 5% Friction & Radiated

System Integration Loughborough

TE Modules Cardiff

Radiator

Diesel or Patrol

TE materials Herriot-Watt

Current status: Pmax < 200W hmax < 5 %

Engine Manifold CAT

TE

Silencer

Desirables: Pmax > 800W hmax > 10 %

World wide activities

24% Coolant

• BMW, BSST, VISTEON, MARLOW, ,,, • GM, GE, VIRGINIA TECH, ORNL, ,,,

33% Exhaust Gas

• NASA-JPL, MICHIGAN, TELLUREX, ,,, • PRATT&WHITNEY, UNITED TECH, .,,,

• SIEMENS, FIAT, BOSCH, IPM,… • CHALMERS, ,KHT, VOLVO… http://www1.eere.energy.gov/vehiclesandfuels/pd fs/deer_2006/session6/2006_deer_fairbanks.pdf

• RENAULT, VOLEO, NEXTER, … • KOMATSU, TOYATO, NISSAN, ,,,

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Energy Harvesting from Body Heat Thermal energy from human body: ~ 6 mW/cm2 Conversion efficiency at T=5K: ~0.3% (not a problem!) Heat dissipation from top case into air

Movement

P ~ 20 mW/cm2

Quartz Watches: ~40 mW (http://www.roachman.com/thermic/)

N P N P N P

Body heat

Thermal insulation

Power storage Thermoelectric and module management Back case

Seiko (45mW), Citzen (14mW)

In order to obtain an operating voltage of 1.5 V, over 2000 pairs of Bi2Te3 thermocouples are required. very costly using conventional module fabrication technology

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Energy Harvesting for Low Power Electronics Recent progress: Modern wireless sensor modules require only ~100 mW Micropelt

Voltage requirement: 3V

Thermal

EnOcean

3V

20 mV

Ultra low power DC/DC converter

http://www.micropelt.com/

Commercial TE modules

http://www.enocean.com/en/energy-harvesting-wireless/

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Symbiotic Use (CHP) of Thermoelectrics for Pre-heating

Hot Fluid Fuel+Air • TE system efficiency increased; • Fuel efficiency increased; • Lean – fuel combustion possible

Conversion efficiency h

0.30

Combustor

h

0.25

P Th  Tc 1  ZT  1  QG Th 1  ZT  Tc / Th

0.20

Generator efficiency

0.15

System efficiency

0.10

Th 2

Th 2

T h(Th )dTh P  McTh1 h (Th )dTh hs     h1 QS Mc(Th1  Tc 2 ) Th1  Tc 2

0.05 0.00 0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Preheat temperature difference, Tp (=Tu-T0)

Heat production 99% Electricity generation 1% 1kW heat system

10W electric power for pump and controls – autonomous.

Paul van der Sluis Philips Research, Eindhoven

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Thermoelectric Energy Harvesting Opportunities • Vehicle exhaust heat • Geothermal heat Waste Heat Recovery

• Hot water from steel plant • Incinerator • Subsea oil wells • Wireless sensors

Low Power Electronics

• Medical sensors on Smart textile

• Aircraft health & safety monitoring

• Solar water heating system Symbiotic Systems (CHP)

• Central heating system • Biomass stoves • Mosquito trap

Dr. Gao Min

Cardiff School of Engineering

Research Activities at Cardiff Thermoelectric Laboratory Current Research Projects

• Nanostructured energy harvesting thermoelectrics based on MgSi2 (FP7) • Thermoelectric solar water heating systems (Overseas funding) • Demonstrating fuel economy benefit of exhaust recovery (EPSRC) • Self-powered mosquito trap based on thermoelectric harvesting (KTP) • Preparation and characterization of TixO1-x thin films (Overseas funding) • Heavy-fermion/superconductor tunneling refrigerator (EPSRC) • Develop a novel ZT measurement technique (Overseas funding)

Preparation/Measurement Facilities • Crystal growth / Hot-pressing / Mechanical-alloying • Thermal co-evaporator for Bi2Te3 thin films • PPMS for thermoelectric properties (2K-400K) • Infrared Microscope for micro-scale thermal profile • Seebeck-resistivity system (300K-800K) • Laser flash thermal diffusivity system (300K-1000K) • DSC 200 for specific heat (77K-650K, Natzsch) • Hall coefficient system (300K-1000K)