Issue 18, 2025

A non-isothermal water formation cell for electrochemical heat recovery

Abstract

Low-grade heat harvesting has emerged as a promising strategy to recover waste heat into usable energy. However, most of the thermo-electrochemical approaches are limited to redox reactions involving metal ion complexes and halide species, which often exhibit low heat-to-electricity conversion efficiencies. We demonstrate a heat harvesting approach based on a non-redox reaction; water formation driven by a net-zero hydrogen redox process. Under standard conditions, its positive entropy change enables the interconversion of nearly 30% of surrounding heat into electrical energy, resulting in a thermodynamic efficiency greater than unity. This water formation-based galvanic–thermogalvanic device demonstrated a temperature-insensitive maximum power density as high as ∼33.55 mW m−2 K−2. Notably, this figure of merit is ∼70 times higher than the state-of-the-art ferrocyanide–ferricyanide-based thermogalvanic devices, thereby extending the scope of electrochemical heat harvesting beyond conventional redox processes.

Graphical abstract: A non-isothermal water formation cell for electrochemical heat recovery

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
04 Feb 2025
Accepted
02 Apr 2025
First published
03 Apr 2025
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2025,16, 7751-7758

A non-isothermal water formation cell for electrochemical heat recovery

R. Mondal, S. Srirangadhamu Yuvaraj, B. Nayak, H. Pradhan and M. Ottakam Thotiyl, Chem. Sci., 2025, 16, 7751 DOI: 10.1039/D5SC00892A

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