Issue 10, 2023

Waste heat recovery using thermally responsive ionic liquids through TiO2 nanopore and macroscopic membranes

Abstract

Waste heat is the untapped heat produced by a thermodynamic process. It is usually released into the surrounding environment without any valorization. But recently, industrial waste heat has been identified as a promising energy source and many techniques have been proposed for its recovery. In this paper we present a method to convert low temperature waste heat (T < 100 °C) into salinity gradients, from which osmotic power is harvested across a nanoporous membrane. The heat is used to trigger the phase separation of a lower critical solution temperature (LCST) water–ionic liquid mixture. The two phases, of different salt concentrations, are fed in two reservoirs separated by a membrane with nanopores ≈30–100 nm in diameter. An osmotic electric current is measured across the membrane for various concentration ratios and pHs, the origin of which is shown to be a diffusio-osmotic (DO) process occurring at the TiO2 pore surface. The power density across the nanoporous TiO2 membrane is found to reach 7 W m−2. This opens up new avenues for the harvesting of waste-heat using nanoporous membranes and ionic liquids in a closed-loop configuration.

Graphical abstract: Waste heat recovery using thermally responsive ionic liquids through TiO2 nanopore and macroscopic membranes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Feb 2023
Accepted
31 Jul 2023
First published
11 Aug 2023

Energy Environ. Sci., 2023,16, 4539-4548

Waste heat recovery using thermally responsive ionic liquids through TiO2 nanopore and macroscopic membranes

M. Pascual, N. Chapuis, S. Abdelghani-Idrissi, M. Jullien, A. Siria and L. Bocquet, Energy Environ. Sci., 2023, 16, 4539 DOI: 10.1039/D3EE00654A

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