Waste heat from electronics can
be converted into reusable energy more efficiently:
Waste heat from
electronics can be converted into reusable energy more efficiently thanks to a collaboration
between the University of Texas at Dallas and Texas Instruments.
The collaborative
project demonstrated that silicon’s ability to harvest energy from heat can be
greatly increased while remaining mass-producible.
Dr. Mark Lee, professor
and head of the Department of Physics in the School of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, is the corresponding author of a study published in Nature
Electronics that describes the results. The findings could greatly influence
how circuits are cooled in electronics, as well as provide a method of powering
IoT sensors.
“Sensors go everywhere
now. They can’t be constantly plugged in, so they must consume very little
power,” Lee said. “Without a reliable light source for photovoltaic energy, you’re
left needing some kind of battery, one that shouldn’t have to be replaced.”
One solution is
thermoelectric generation which converts a difference in temperature into
electrical energy, but the primary hurdles for widespread thermoelectric
harvesting have been efficiency and cost.
“Thermoelectric
generation has been expensive, both in terms of cost per device and cost per
watt of energy generated,” Lee said in a statement. “The best materials are
fairly exotic – they’re either rare or toxic – and they aren’t easily made
compatible with basic semiconductor technology.”
Silicon is a poor
thermoelectric material in its bulk, crystalline form but research has
indicated that it performs much better as a nanowire, a filamentlike shape with
two of its three dimensions less than 100nm.
“In the decade since
those experiments, however, efforts to make a useful silicon thermoelectric
generator haven’t succeeded,” Lee said.
One barrier is that the
nanowire is too small to be compatible with chip-manufacturing processes. To
overcome this, Lee and his team relied on so-called nanoblades, which are 80nm
thick but more than eight times that in width, which makes them compatible with
chip-manufacturing rules. Study co-author Hal Edwards, a TI Fellow at Texas
Instruments, designed and supervised fabrication of the prototype devices.
Lee explained that the
nanoblade shape loses some thermoelectric ability relative to the nanowire.
“However, using many at
once can generate about as much power as the best exotic materials, with the
same area and temperature difference,” he said.
One key realisation was
that some previous attempts failed because too much material was used. “When
you use too much silicon, the temperature differential that feeds the
generation drops,” Lee said. “Too much waste heat is used, and, as that
hot-to-cold margin drops, you can’t generate as much thermoelectric power.
There is a sweet spot that, with our nanoblades, we’re much closer to finding
than anyone else. The change in the form of silicon studied changed the game.”
Lee said that the
advanced silicon-processing technology at Texas Instruments allows for
efficient, inexpensive manufacturing of a huge number of the devices.
“You can live with a 40
per cent reduction in thermoelectric ability relative to exotic materials
because your cost per watt generated plummets,” he said. “The marginal cost is
a factor of 100 lower.”
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