Volume 6, Issue 10 p. 1865-1870
Communication

Prussian Blue Analogues as Promising Thermal Power Generation Materials

Yuya Fukuzumi

Graduate School of Pure and Applied Science, Faculty of Pure and Applied Science, Tsukuba Research Center for Energy Materials Science (TREMS), University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, 305-8571 Japan

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Kaoru Amaha

Graduate School of Pure and Applied Science, Faculty of Pure and Applied Science, Tsukuba Research Center for Energy Materials Science (TREMS), University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, 305-8571 Japan

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Assist. Prof. Wataru Kobayashi

Graduate School of Pure and Applied Science, Faculty of Pure and Applied Science, Tsukuba Research Center for Energy Materials Science (TREMS), University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, 305-8571 Japan

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Assist. Prof. Hideharu Niwa

Graduate School of Pure and Applied Science, Faculty of Pure and Applied Science, Tsukuba Research Center for Energy Materials Science (TREMS), University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, 305-8571 Japan

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Prof. Yutaka Mortitomo

Corresponding Author

Graduate School of Pure and Applied Science, Faculty of Pure and Applied Science, Tsukuba Research Center for Energy Materials Science (TREMS), University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, 305-8571 Japan

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First published: 05 February 2018
Citations: 8

Abstract

The thermal coefficient (α=dV/dT) of redox potential (V) enables an efficient thermal power generation using waste heat. Actually, a battery‐type thermocell, which consists of two kinds of redoxable solids with different α as anode and cathode, is demonstrated to produce electric energy in thermal cycles. To fabricate high performance device, α is systematically investigated in three kinds of Prussian blue analogues (PBAs), NaxCo[Fe(CN)6]0.71 (abbreviated as NCF71), NaxCo[Fe(CN)6]0.90 (NCF90) and NaxMn[Fe(CN)6]0.83 (NMF83), against the Na+ concentration (x). NCF90 shows the highest positive α (=1.4 mV K−1) in the lower‐lying plateau while NMF83 shows the highest negative α (=−0.4 mV K−1) in the lower‐lying plateau. In addition, the NCF90/NMF83 thermocell produces 5.5 meV/NCF90 in the initial cycle between TL (=286 K) and TH (=313 K). The thermal efficiency (η=2.3 %) reaches 27 % of the Carnot efficiency (ηcarnot=8.7 %). Thus, PBAs are promising materials for thermal power generation.

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