Litcius/Paper detail

Maximal nighttime electrical power generation via optimal radiative cooling

Lingling Fan, Wei Li, Weiliang Jin, Meir Orenstein, Shanhui Fan

2020Optics Express82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, two orders of magnitude higher than the previously reported experimental result, is achievable using existing technologies. This system combines radiative cooling and thermoelectric power generation and operates at night when solar energy harvesting is unavailable. The thermoelectric power generator (TEG) itself covers less than 1 percent of the system footprint area when achieving this optimal power generation, showing economic feasibility. We study the influence of emissivity spectra, thermal convection, thermoelectric figure of merit and the area ratio between the TEG and the radiative cooler on the power generation performance. We optimize the thermal radiation emitter attached to the cold side and propose practical material implementation. The importance of the optimal emitter is elucidated by the gain of 153% in power density compared to regular blackbody emitters.

Topics & Concepts

Thermoelectric generatorEmissivityRadiative coolingElectricity generationRadiative transferRadiancePower densityMaterials scienceThermoelectric coolingEnvironmental scienceCommon emitterThermal radiationBlack-body radiationOptoelectronicsThermoelectric effectOpticsElectric powerNuclear engineeringPower (physics)RadiationPhysicsMeteorologyThermodynamicsEngineeringThermal Radiation and Cooling TechnologiesAdvanced Thermoelectric Materials and DevicesAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics