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Organic π-type thermoelectric module supported by photolithographic mold: a working hypothesis of sticky thermoelectric materials

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Version 2 2018-07-17, 08:13
Version 1 2018-06-12, 07:48
journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-17, 08:13 authored by Norifusa Satoh, Masaji Otsuka, Tomoko Ohki, Akihiko Ohi, Yasuaki Sakurai, Yukihiko Yamashita, Takao Mori

To examine the potential of organic thermoelectrics (TEs) for energy harvesting, we fabricated an organic TE module to achieve 250 mV in the open-circuit voltage which is sufficient to drive a commercially available booster circuit designed for energy harvesting usage. We chose the π-type module structure to maintain the temperature differences in organic TE legs, and then optimized the p- and n-type TE materials’ properties. After injecting the p- and n-type TE materials into photolithographic mold, we eventually achieved 250 mV in the open-circuit voltage by a method to form the upper electrodes. However, we faced a difficulty to reduce the contact resistance in this material system. We conclude that TE materials must be inversely designed from the viewpoints of the expected module structures and mass-production processes, especially for the purpose of energy harvesting.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institute for Materials Science [PE416]; Denka Company Limited [NA002].

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