Outstanding Electrode-Dependent Seebeck Coefficients in Ionic Hydrogels for Thermally Chargeable Supercapacitor near Room Temperature

Thermoelectric power generation from waste heat is an important component of future sustainable development. Ion-conducting materials are promising candidates because of their high Seebeck coefficients. This study demonstrates that ionic hydrogels based on imidazolium chloride salts exhibit outstand...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied materials & interfaces 2020-09, Vol.12 (39), p.43674-43683
Hauptverfasser: Horike, Shohei, Wei, Qingshuo, Kirihara, Kazuhiro, Mukaida, Masakazu, Sasaki, Takeshi, Koshiba, Yasuko, Fukushima, Tatsuya, Ishida, Kenji
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container_end_page 43683
container_issue 39
container_start_page 43674
container_title ACS applied materials & interfaces
container_volume 12
creator Horike, Shohei
Wei, Qingshuo
Kirihara, Kazuhiro
Mukaida, Masakazu
Sasaki, Takeshi
Koshiba, Yasuko
Fukushima, Tatsuya
Ishida, Kenji
description Thermoelectric power generation from waste heat is an important component of future sustainable development. Ion-conducting materials are promising candidates because of their high Seebeck coefficients. This study demonstrates that ionic hydrogels based on imidazolium chloride salts exhibit outstanding Seebeck coefficients of up to 10 mV K–1. Along with their relatively high ionic conductivities (1.6 mS cm–1) and extremely low thermal conductivities (∼0.2 W m–1 K–1), these hydrogels have good potential for use in heat recovery systems. The voltage behavior in response to temperature difference (stable or transient) differs significantly depending on the metal electrode material. We evaluated the electrode-dependent temperature sensitivity of the double layer capacitance of these hydrogels, which revealed that the thermally induced polarization of ions at the interface is one of the main contributors to the thermovoltage. Our results demonstrate the potential capability for ion and metal interactions to be used as an effective baseline for exploring ionic thermoelectric materials and devices. The developed thermoelectric supercapacitor exhibits reversible charging–discharging behavior under repeated disconnecting–connecting of an external load with a constant temperature difference, which offers a novel strategy for heat-to-electricity energy conversion from steady-temperature heat sources.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acsami.0c11752
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title Outstanding Electrode-Dependent Seebeck Coefficients in Ionic Hydrogels for Thermally Chargeable Supercapacitor near Room Temperature
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