
TRANSLATE researcher Dr. Rajkumar Sama presented this work in the 75th Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics (APS 2022). Abstract: In the past few years, thermoelectric energy conversion in electrolyte-filled nanochannels has received increasing attention. The thermovoltage created with corresponding devices often exceeds that of solid-state thermoelectric devices. Usually, significant thermovoltages can only be generated in the case of overlapping electric double layers (EDLs) from opposing channel walls. Ionic liquids (ILs) can be regarded as molten salts and are fundamentally promising electrolytes because of their high density of primary charge carriers. For ILs, the standard scheme of computing the EDL thickness results in values in the range of Angstroms, which precludes EDL overlap for all practical purposes. However, recent experimental results [1] indicate that the effective charge carriers in confined ILs are actually pseudoparticles, i.e. clusters of many primary charge carriers that can partially dissociate in a thermally activated process. Based on the coupled Poisson-Nernst-Planck, Navier-Stokes and heat transport equations, we study thermovoltage generation in an IL-filled nanochannel with different temperatures applied to the two ends of the channel. In that context, the number density of effective charge carries is obtained from an Arrhenius equation. Next to the numerical model, we have developed an analytical model based on the long-wavelength approximation. The results indicate that for the same degree of EDL overlap, the thermovoltage obtained with ILs is significantly higher than that obtained with aqueous electrolytes, by about a factor of five at a wall zeta potential of 25 mV. The predictions of the analytical model agree very well with the numerical results. In total, our theoretical studies indicate that confined ILs bear a significant potential for thermoelectric energy conversion. [1] Gebbie, M. A., Dobbs, H. A., Valtiner, M. Israelachvili, J. N. Long-range electrostatic screening in ionic liquids, PNAS, 2015, 112, 7432–7437. The authors acknowledge funding by the TRANSLATE project of the European Commission, grant agreement ID: 964251
energy harvesting, waste heat recovery, thermoelectric devices, nanochannels, h2020, electric double layer, EU funded, waste heat, nanofluidics, thermovoltage generation, ionic liquids, green energy, electrochemistry, seebeck effect
energy harvesting, waste heat recovery, thermoelectric devices, nanochannels, h2020, electric double layer, EU funded, waste heat, nanofluidics, thermovoltage generation, ionic liquids, green energy, electrochemistry, seebeck effect
