Experimental and computational analysis of thermoelectric modules based on melt-mixed polypropylene composites

Abstract

Researchers are constantly looking for new materials that exploit the Seebeck phenomenon to convert heat into electrical energy using thermoelectric generators (TEGs). New lead-free thermoelectric materials are being investigated as part of the EU project InComEss, with one of the anticipated uses being converting wasted heat into electric energy. Such research aims to reduce the production costs as well as the environmental impact of current TEG modules which mostly employ bismuth for their construction. The use of polymers that, despite lower efficiency, achieve increasingly higher values of electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficients at a low heat transfer coefficient is increasingly discussed in the literature. This article presents two thermoelectric generator (TEG) models based on data previously described in the literature. Two types of designs are presented: consisting of 4- and 49-leg pairs of p- and n-type composites based on polypropylene melt-mixed with single-walled carbon nanotubes. The models being developed using COMSOL Multiphysics software and validated based on measurements carried out in the laboratory. Based on the results of the analysis, conductive polymer composites employing insulating matrices can be considered as a promising material of the future for TEG modules.

Description
Keywords
COMSOL simulation, Melt-mixed polypropylene composites, New TEG leg geometries, Thermoelectric generators, Validation of TEG model
Citation
Doraghi, Q., Żabnieńska-Góra, A., Norman, L., Krause, B., Pötschke, P., & Jouhara, H. (2023). Experimental and computational analysis of thermoelectric modules based on melt-mixed polypropylene composites. 39. https://doi.org//10.1016/j.tsep.2023.101693
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported