Boosted thermogalvanic thermopower upon solid-to-liquid phase transition†
Abstract
Thermogalvanic cells offer scalable low-grade waste heat recovery using tunable electrode-dependent thermopower and electrolyte-dependent thermal conductivities. However, the use of single-phase electrodes thermodynamically curbs the entropy difference, limiting the thermopower enhancement. Here, we show that phase transforming electrodes achieve significantly enhanced thermopower using the melting phase transition of bulk NaxK alloys. Under both temporal and spatial temperature gradients, the electrodes exhibit significantly increased thermopower up to 26.1 mV K−1 across the melting point and the generated voltages of 261 mV under 10 K temperature gradient. We also show that stabilizing the liquid metal electrode–electrolyte interface plays a critical role in evaluating the thermopower associated with the phase transition. The strategies demonstrated in this work suggest potential design guidelines towards optimizing thermogalvanic cells to specific temperature ranges.