DISPOSITIVOS OPTOMECANICOS BASADOS EN MATERIALES ACTIVOS Y AUTOENSAMBLADOS

RTI2018-093921-A-C44

Nombre agencia financiadora Agencia Estatal de Investigación
Acrónimo agencia financiadora AEI
Programa Programa Estatal de I+D+i Orientada a los Retos de la Sociedad
Subprograma Programa Estatal de I+D+i Orientada a los Retos de la Sociedad
Convocatoria Retos Investigación: Proyectos I+D+i
Año convocatoria 2018
Unidad de gestión Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación 2017-2020
Centro beneficiario FUNDACIÓ INSTITUT CATALÀ DE NANOCIÈNCIA I NANOTECNOLOGIA
Identificador persistente http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100011033

Publicaciones

Resultados totales (Incluyendo duplicados): 5
Encontrada(s) 1 página(s)

Enhanced behaviour of a passive thermoelectric generator with phase change heat exchangers and radiative cooling

Academica-e. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Pública de Navarra
  • Astrain Ulibarrena, David
  • Jaramillo-Fernández, Juliana
  • Araiz Vega, Miguel
  • Francone, Achille
  • Catalán Ros, Leyre
  • Jacobo-Martín, Alejandra
  • Alegría Cía, Patricia
  • Sotomayor-Torres, Clivia M.
Heat exchangers are essential to optimize the efficiency of Thermoelectric Generators (TEGs), and heat pipes without fans have proven to be an advantageous design as it maintains the characteristic robustness of thermoelectricity, low maintenance and lack of moving parts. However, the efficiency of these heat exchangers decreases under natural convection conditions, reducing their heat transfer capacity and thus thermoelectric power production. This work reports on a novel heat exchanger that combines for the first time, phase change and radiative cooling in a thermoelectric generator to improve its efficiency and increase the production of electrical energy, specially under natural convection. For this, two thermoelectric generators with heat-pipes on their cold sides have been tested: one with the radiative coating and the other without it. Their thermal resistances have been determined and the electric power output was compared under different working conditions, namely, natural convection and forced convection indoors and outdoors. The experimental tests show a clear reduction of the heat exchanger thermal resistance thanks to the radiative coating and consequently, an increase of electric production 8.3 % with outdoor wind velocities of 1 m/s, and up to 54.8 % under free convection conditions. The application of the radiative surface treatment is shown to result in a more stable electrical energy production, suppressing the drastic decrease in the generated electric power that occurs in thermoelectric generators when they work under free convection., The authors acknowledge the support of the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, and the European Regional Development Fund , under grants PID2021-124014OB-I00 (VIVOTEG), TED2021-129359B-I00 (GEOTEG), PGC2018-101743-B-I00 (SIP) and RTI2018-093921-A-C44 (SMOOTH). Open access funding provided by Universidad Pública de Navarra.




Simulations of micro-sphere/shell 2D silica photonic crystals for radiative cooling

Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
  • Whitworth, Guy L.|||0000-0002-5060-6946
  • Jaramillo Fernández, Juliana|||0000-0002-4787-3904
  • Pariente, Jose Angel|||0000-0003-2649-9164
  • Garcia, Pedro David
  • Blanco, Alvaro|||0000-0002-0015-4873
  • Lopez, Cefe
  • Sotomayor Torres, Clivia M.|||0000-0001-9986-2716
Passive daytime radiative cooling has recently become an attractive approach to address the global energy demand associated with modern refrigeration technologies. One technique to increase the radiative cooling performance is to engineer the surface of a polar dielectric material to enhance its emittance atwavelengths in the atmospheric infrared transparency window (8-13 ìm) by outcoupling surface-phonon polaritons (SPhPs) into free-space. Here we present a theoretical investigation of new surface morphologies based upon self-assembled silica photonic crystals (PCs) using an in-house built rigorous coupled-wave analysis (RCWA) code. Simulations predict that silica micro-sphere PCs can reach up to 73 K below ambient temperature, when solar absorption and conductive/convective losses can be neglected. Micro-shell structures are studied to explore the direct outcoupling of the SPhP, resulting in near-unity emittance between 8 and 10 ìm. Additionally, the effect of material composition is explored by simulating soda-lime glass micro-shells, which, in turn, exhibit a temperature reduction of 61 K below ambient temperature. The RCWA code was compared to FTIR measurements of silica micro-spheres, self-assembled on microscope slides.




Highly-Scattering Cellulose-Based Films for Radiative Cooling

Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
  • Jaramillo Fernández, Juliana|||0000-0002-4787-3904
  • Yang, Han
  • Schertel, Lukas
  • Whitworth, Guy L.|||0000-0002-5060-6946
  • Garcia, Pedro David
  • Vignolini, Silvia
  • Sotomayor Torres, Clivia M.|||0000-0001-9986-2716
Passive radiative cooling (RC) enables the cooling of objects below ambient temperature during daytime without consuming energy, promising to be a game changer in terms of energy savings and CO2 reduction. However, so far most RC surfaces are obtained by energy-intensive nanofabrication processes or make use of unsustainable materials. These limitations are overcome by developing cellulose films with unprecedentedly low absorption of solar irradiance and strong mid-infrared (mid-IR) emittance. In particular, a cellulose-derivative (cellulose acetate) is exploited to produce porous scattering films of two different thicknesses, L ≈ 30 µm (thin) and L ≈ 300 µm (thick), making them adaptable to above and below-ambient cooling applications. The thin and thick films absorb only ≈5% of the solar irradiance, which represents a net cooling power gain of at least 17 W m−2, compared to state-of-the-art cellulose-based radiative-cooling materials. Field tests show that the films can reach up to ≈5 °C below ambient temperature, when solar absorption and conductive/convective losses are minimized. Under dryer conditions (water column = 1 mm), it is estimated that the films can reach average minimum temperatures of ≈7-8 °C below the ambient. The work presents an alternative cellulose-based material for efficient radiative cooling that is simple to fabricate, cost-efficient and avoids the use of polluting materials.




Engineering nanoscale hypersonic phonon transport

Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
  • Florez, Omar|||0000-0001-6662-9811
  • Arregui Bravo, Guillermo|||0000-0002-6458-5277
  • Albrechtsen, Marcus|||0000-0003-4226-0997
  • Ng, Ryan C.|||0000-0002-0527-9130
  • Gomis-Bresco, Jordi|||0000-0002-6066-7064
  • Stobbe, Søren|||0000-0002-0991-041X
  • Sotomayor Torres, Clivia M|||0000-0001-9986-2716
  • García Fernández, Pedro David|||0000-0002-3422-178X
Controlling the vibrations in solids is crucial to tailor their mechanical properties and their interaction with light. Thermal vibrations represent a source of noise and dephasing for many physical processes at the quantum level. One strategy to avoid these vibrations is to structure a solid such that it possesses a phononic stop band, i.e., a frequency range over which there are no available mechanical modes. Here, we demonstrate the complete absence of mechanical vibrations at room temperature over a broad spectral window, with a 5.3 GHz wide band gap centered at 8.4 GHz in a patterned silicon nanostructure membrane measured using Brillouin light scattering spectroscopy. By constructing a line-defect waveguide, we directly measure GHz localized modes at room temperature. Our experimental results of thermally excited guided mechanical modes at GHz frequencies provides an eficient platform for photon-phonon integration with applications in optomechanics and signal processing transduction.




Enhanced behaviour of a passive thermoelectric generator with phase change heat exchangers and radiative cooling

Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
  • Astrain, David|||0000-0002-6987-0640
  • Jaramillo Fernández, Juliana|||0000-0002-4787-3904
  • Araiz, Miguel|||0000-0002-7674-0078
  • Francone, Achille|||0000-0001-7757-9901
  • Catalán, Leyre|||0000-0003-0140-6689
  • Jacobo-Martín, Alejandra|||0000-0003-2404-2881
  • Alegría, Patricia
  • Sotomayor Torres, Clivia M.|||0000-0001-9986-2716
Heat exchangers are essential to optimize the efficiency of Thermoelectric Generators (TEGs), and heat pipes without fans have proven to be an advantageous design as it maintains the characteristic robustness of thermoelectricity, low maintenance and lack of moving parts. However, the efficiency of these heat exchangers decreases under natural convection conditions, reducing their heat transfer capacity and thus thermoelectric power production. This work reports on a novel heat exchanger that combines for the first time, phase change and radiative cooling in a thermoelectric generator to improve its efficiency and increase the production of electrical energy, specially under natural convection. For this, two thermoelectric generators with heat-pipes on their cold sides have been tested: one with the radiative coating and the other without it. Their thermal resistances have been determined and the electric power output was compared under different working conditions, namely, natural convection and forced convection indoors and outdoors. The experimental tests show a clear reduction of the heat exchanger thermal resistance thanks to the radiative coating and consequently, an increase of electric production 8.3 % with outdoor wind velocities of 1 m/s, and up to 54.8 % under free convection conditions. The application of the radiative surface treatment is shown to result in a more stable electrical energy production, suppressing the drastic decrease in the generated electric power that occurs in thermoelectric generators when they work under free convection.