| Literature DB >> 26975208 |
Akihiro Kirihara1,2, Koichi Kondo3, Masahiko Ishida1,2, Kazuki Ihara1,2, Yuma Iwasaki1, Hiroko Someya1,2, Asuka Matsuba1, Ken-ichi Uchida4,5, Eiji Saitoh2,4,6,7, Naoharu Yamamoto3, Shigeru Kohmoto1, Tomoo Murakami1.
Abstract
Heat-flow sensing is expected to be an important technological component of smart thermal management in the future. Conventionally, the thermoelectric (TE) conversion technique, which is based on the Seebeck effect, has been used to measure a heat flow by converting the flow into electric voltage. However, for ubiquitous heat-flow visualization, thin and flexible sensors with extremely low thermal resistance are highly desired. Recently, another type of TE effect, the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect (LSSE), has aroused great interest because the LSSE potentially offers favourable features for TE applications such as simple thin-film device structures. Here we demonstrate an LSSE-based flexible TE sheet that is especially suitable for a heat-flow sensing application. This TE sheet contained a Ni0.2Zn0.3Fe2.5O4 film which was formed on a flexible plastic sheet using a spray-coating method known as "ferrite plating". The experimental results suggest that the ferrite-plated film, which has a columnar crystal structure aligned perpendicular to the film plane, functions as a unique one-dimensional spin-current conductor suitable for bendable LSSE-based sensors. This newly developed thin TE sheet may be attached to differently shaped heat sources without obstructing an innate heat flux, paving the way to versatile heat-flow measurements and management.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26975208 PMCID: PMC4791552 DOI: 10.1038/srep23114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Concept of TE sheet for heat-flow sensing based on the LSSE.
The LSSE-based TE sheet consists of a metallic film and a magnetic (ferro- or ferrimagnetic) film formed on a flexible substrate. When a heat flux q flows through the TE sheet, a spin current js is induced and injected from the ferrite film into the metallic film by the LSSE. Then the js is finally converted into an electric voltage V as a result of the inverse spin Hall effect (ISHE) in the metallic film. The thin and simple bilayer structure of the TE sheet allows us to design novel heat-flow sensors with low thermal resistance and a flexible shape.
Figure 2Demonstration of heat-flow-sensing TE sheet based on the LSSE.
(a) Schematic of the ferrite-plating method. An aqueous reaction solution (FeCl2 + NiCl2 + ZnCl2) and an oxidizer (NaNO2 + CH3COONH4) are sprayed onto a substrate mounted on a rotating stage. (b) SEM image of a Ni0.2Zn0.3Fe2.5O4 film grown on a SiO2/Si substrate using the ferrite-plating method. The film exhibits a columnar-crystal structure. The typical diameter of the columnar grains is approximately 100 nm. (c) Photograph of an LSSE-based flexible TE sheet, in which a Pt/Ni0.2Zn0.3Fe2.5O4 film was formed on a 25-μm-thick polyimide substrate. (d) TE voltage V as a function of an external magnetic field H, measured when a heat flux q was applied across the TE sheet. The sign of V is reversed, when the sign of H or q changes. (e) TE voltage from the TE sheet as a function of q. From the fitting with the solid line, the heat-flow sensitivity of this TE sheet was V/q = 0.98 nV/(W/m2).
Figure 3Ferrite-film-thickness dependence of LSSE-based TE sheets.
The tF dependence of the heat-flow sensitivity V/q, where the longitudinal axis is normalized by the sensitivity at tF = 500 nm. The dependence is well fitted by an exponential curve (V/q)Norm = 1 − exp (−tF/λ) with λ = 71 nm, consistent with the magnon-driven LSSE scenario.
Figure 4Heat-flow sensing with a bent TE sheet.
(a) TE voltage V from a flat Pt/Ni0.2Zn0.3Fe2.5O4/polyimide sample as a function of an external magnetic field H measured when the heat flux q was applied across the sample over a 20 × 20-mm2 area. (b) H dependence of the TE voltage V from a Pt/Ni0.2Zn0.3Fe2.5O4/polyimide sample that was bent with a radius of curvature r = 17 mm, when the heat flux q was applied across the sample over a 20 × 20-mm2 area. (c) Heat-flow sensitivity V/q as a function of curvature r−1, indicating that V/q is almost independent of r−1.