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Rensselaer Engineers “Cook” Promising New Heat-Harvesting Nanomaterials in Microwave Oven
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Researchers
Create Large Marble-Sized Pellets of Thermoelectric
Nanomaterials
Engineering researchers at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute have developed new thermoelectric
nanomaterials, pictured above, that could lead to
techniques for better capturing and putting this waste
heat to work. The key ingredients for making marble-sized
pellets of the new material are aluminum and a common,
everyday microwave oven.
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Waste heat is a byproduct of nearly all electrical devices
and industrial processes, from driving a car to flying an
aircraft or operating a power plant. Engineering researchers at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have developed new
nanomaterials that could lead to techniques for better
capturing and putting this waste heat to work. The key
ingredients for making marble-sized pellets of the new material
are aluminum and a common, everyday microwave oven.
Harvesting electricity from waste heat requires a material
that is good at conducting electricity but poor at conducting
heat. One of the most promising candidates for this job is zinc
oxide, a nontoxic, inexpensive material with a high melting
point. While nanoengineering techniques exist for boosting the
electrical conductivity of zinc oxide, the material’s high
thermal conductivity is a roadblock to its effectiveness in
collecting and converting waste heat. Because thermal and
electrical conductivity are related properties, it’s very
difficult to decrease one without also diminishing the
other.
However, a team of researchers led by Ganpati Ramanath,
professor in the Materials Science and Engineering Department
at Rensselaer, in collaboration with the University of
Wollongong, Australia, have demonstrated a new way to decrease
zinc oxide’s thermal conductivity without reducing its
electrical conductivity. The innovation involves adding minute
amounts of aluminum to zinc oxide, and processing the materials
in a microwave oven. The process is adapted from a technique
invented at Rensselaer by Ramanath, graduate student Rutvik
Mehta, and Theo Borca-Tasciuc, associate professor in the Department of Mechanical,
Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering (MANE). This work could
open the door to new technologies for harvesting waste heat and
creating highly energy efficient cars, aircraft, power plants,
and other systems.
“Harvesting waste heat is a very attractive proposition,
since we can convert the heat into electricity and use it to
power devices — like in a car or a jet — that is creating the
heat in the first place. This would lead to greater efficiency
in nearly everything we do and, ultimately, reduce our
dependence on fossil fuels,” Ramanath said. “We are the first
to demonstrate such favorable thermoelectric properties in
bulk-sized high-temperature materials, and we feel that our
discovery will pave the way to new power harvesting devices
from waste heat.”
Results of the study are detailed in the paper “Al-Doped
Zinc Oxide Nanocomposites with Enhanced Thermoelectric
Properties,” published recently by the journal Nano
Letters. View the paper online at: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nl202439h
To create the new nanomaterial, researchers added minute
quantities of aluminum to shape-controlled zinc oxide
nanocrystals, and heated them in a $40 microwave oven.
Ramanath’s team is able to produce several grams of the
nanomaterial in a matter of few minutes, which is enough to
make a device measuring a few centimeters long. The process is
less expensive and more scalable than conventional methods and
is environmentally friendly, Ramanath said. Unlike many
nanomaterials that are fabricated directly onto a substrate or
surface, this new microwave method can produce pellets of
nanomaterials that can be applied to different surfaces. These
attributes, together with low thermal conductivity and high
electrical conductivity, are highly suitable for heat
harvesting applications.
“Our discovery could be key to overcoming major fundamental
challenges related to working with thermoelectric materials,”
said project collaborator Borca-Tasciuc.
“Moreover, our process is amenable to scaling for large-scale
production. It’s really amazing that a few atoms of aluminum
can conspire to give us thermoelectric properties we’re
interested in.”
This work was a collaborative effort between Ramanath and
Shi Xue Dou, a professor at the Institute for Superconducting
and Electronic Materials at the University of Wollogong,
Australia. Wollongong graduate student Priyanka Jood carried
out the work together with Rensselaer graduate students Rutvik
Mehta and Yanliang Zhang during Jood’s one-year visit to
Rensselaer. Co-authors of the paper are Richard
W. Siegel, the Robert W. Hunt Professor of Materials
Science and Engineering; along with professors Xiaolin Wang and
Germanas Peleckis at the University of Wollongong.
This research is funded by support from IBM through the
Rensselaer Nanotechnology Center; S3TEC, an Energy
Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of
Energy (DoE) Office of Basic Energy Sciences; the Australian
Research Council (ARC); and the University of Wollongong.
For more information on Ramanath’s research at Rensselaer,
visit:
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Published
September 27,
2011 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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