Harvesting Waste Thermal Energy Using a Surface-Modified Carbon Fiber-Based Thermo-Electrochemical Cell
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. Sustainability
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Abstract
An important direction in the development of energy saving policy is harvesting and
conversion into electricity of low-grade waste heat. The present paper is devoted to the improvement
of the efficiency of thermo-electrochemical cells based on carbon fiber electrodes and potassium
ferri-/ferrocyanide redox electrolyte. The influence of the carbon fiber electrode surface modification
(magnetron deposition of silver and titanium or infiltration implantation of nanoscale titanium
oxide) on the output power and parameters of the impedance equivalent scheme of a thermo electrochemical cell has been studied. Two kinds of cell designs (a conventional electrochemical
cell with a salt bridge and a coin cell-type body) were investigated. It was found that the nature of
the surface modification of electrodes can change the internal resistance of the cell by three orders
of magnitude. The dependence of the equivalent scheme parameters and output power density of
the thermoelectric cell on the type of electrode materials was presented. It was observed that the
maximum power for carbon fiber modified with titanium metal and titanium oxide was 25.2 mW/m2
and the efficiency was 1.37%.