| Literature DB >> 27615036 |
Tony Varghese1, Courtney Hollar2, Joseph Richardson3, Nicholas Kempf2, Chao Han2, Pasindu Gamarachchi2, David Estrada1, Rutvik J Mehta4, Yanliang Zhang1,2.
Abstract
Screen printing allows for direct conversion of thermoelectric nanocrystals into flexible energy harvesters and coolers. However, obtaining flexible thermoelectric materials with high figure of merit ZT through printing is an exacting challenge due to the difficulties to synthesize high-performance thermoelectric inks and the poor density and electrical conductivity of the printed films. Here, we demonstrate high-performance flexible films and devices by screen printing bismuth telluride based nanocrystal inks synthesized using a microwave-stimulated wet-chemical method. Thermoelectric films of several tens of microns thickness were screen printed onto a flexible polyimide substrate followed by cold compaction and sintering. The n-type films demonstrate a peak ZT of 0.43 along with superior flexibility, which is among the highest reported ZT values in flexible thermoelectric materials. A flexible thermoelectric device fabricated using the printed films produces a high power density of 4.1 mW/cm(2) with 60 °C temperature difference between the hot side and cold side. The highly scalable and low cost process to fabricate flexible thermoelectric materials and devices demonstrated here opens up many opportunities to transform thermoelectric energy harvesting and cooling applications.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27615036 PMCID: PMC5018881 DOI: 10.1038/srep33135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic illustration of overall fabrication process for the flexible thermoelectric films, including nanocrystal synthesis, nano-ink processing, screen printing of thermoelectric films on flexible substrate, and sintered flexible films.
Figure 2SEM images of (a) the Bi2Te2.8Se0.2 nanocrystals and (b) the cross section of a printed film on polyimide substrate.
Figure 3Temperature-dependent (a) Electrical conductivity (b) Seebeck coefficient (c) Thermal conductivity and (d) ZT of a 10 μm thick flexible film fabricated by printing the nanoplate ink and a 500 μm thick reference pellet fabricated by cold-compaction and sintering of the pure nanoplate powders.
The thermoelectric performance comparison between our work and previous reported n-type flexible thermoelectric films.
| Materials details | Power factor (mWm−1K−2) | Peak/room T* ZT | Ref. | Fabrication methods |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bi2Te2.8Se0.2 | 0.56 | 0.43 | (Ours) | Screen printing |
| Bi2Te3 | 1.33 | 0.35* | Screen printing | |
| Bi2Te3 + Epoxy | 0.28 | 0.31* | Dispenser printing | |
| CNT | 0.15 | N.A. | Drop casting | |
| WS2 | 0.007 | N.A. | Vacuum filtration | |
| TiS2-Polymer | 0.45 | 0.28 | Electrochemical intercalation | |
| CNT-PEDOT-TDAE | 1.05 | ~0.5* | Spraying and spin coating |
Figure 4Percentage increase of electrical resistances of flexible films as a function of number of bending cycles for 7 mm bending radius and 5 mm bending radius.
Figure 5Testing results of a thermoelectric device fabricated by the screen printed flexible films.
(a) Experimental and calculated open circuit voltage vs. temperature differences (ΔT), (b) Device operating voltage vs. current tested at various ΔT, (c) Experimental and calculated electrical power density vs. ΔT (d) Electrical power output tested at various ΔT. Inset in (a) is a picture of the device.