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Compliant and stretchable thermoelectric coils for energy harvesting in miniature flexible devices

Authors :
Kan Li
Chaoqun Zhou
Feng Zhu
Heling Wang
Yonggang Huang
Juntong Wang
Ki Jun Yu
Alison C. Dunn
John A. Rogers
Zhaoqian Xie
Stephen Dongmin Kang
Haiwen Luan
G. Jeffrey Snyder
Kewang Nan
Matthias T. Agne
Yihui Zhang
Nan, Kewang [0000-0002-2745-0656]
Kang, Stephen Dongmin [0000-0002-7491-7933]
Li, Kan [0000-0003-4864-3446]
Dunn, Alison C [0000-0002-4841-1293]
Zhou, Chaoqun [0000-0002-2744-7916]
Agne, Matthias T [0000-0001-8270-5730]
Wang, Heling [0000-0001-7859-5153]
Luan, Haiwen [0000-0003-0722-1108]
Zhang, Yihui [0000-0003-0885-2067]
Huang, Yonggang [0000-0002-0483-8359]
Snyder, G Jeffrey [0000-0003-1414-8682]
Rogers, John A [0000-0002-3830-5980]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2018.

Abstract

Thermoelectric coils for energy harvesting are fabricated in miniature flexible devices.<br />With accelerating trends in miniaturization of semiconductor devices, techniques for energy harvesting become increasingly important, especially in wearable technologies and sensors for the internet of things. Although thermoelectric systems have many attractive attributes in this context, maintaining large temperature differences across the device terminals and achieving low–thermal impedance interfaces to the surrounding environment become increasingly difficult to achieve as the characteristic dimensions decrease. Here, we propose and demonstrate an architectural solution to this problem, where thin-film active materials integrate into compliant, open three-dimensional (3D) forms. This approach not only enables efficient thermal impedance matching but also multiplies the heat flow through the harvester, thereby increasing the efficiencies for power conversion. Interconnected arrays of 3D thermoelectric coils built using microscale ribbons of monocrystalline silicon as the active material demonstrate these concepts. Quantitative measurements and simulations establish the basic operating principles and the key design features. The results suggest a scalable strategy for deploying hard thermoelectric thin-film materials in harvesters that can integrate effectively with soft materials systems, including those of the human body.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
4
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d1bcf940c2ef6c0004df94aa753a17a6