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Researchers Convert Heat to Electricity Using Organic Molecules, Could Lead to New Energy Source
Summary posted by Meridian on 3/2/2007 This press release reports that researchers at the University of California (UC), Berkeley in the U.S. have successfully generated electricity from heat by trapping organic molecules between metal nanoparticles," an achievement that "could pave the way toward the development of a new source of energy". The researchers' work is published in Science Express, an electronic publication of the journal Science. Scientists have tried for 50 years to build thermoelectric converters that would convert heat into electricity more efficiently than do current methods. Thermoelectric converters rely on the Seebeck effect, in which voltage is created when the junctions of two different metals are kept at different temperatures. So far, thermoelectric converters have only been made to operate at 7 percent efficiency, compared with the 20 percent efficiency rate of traditional heat engines. Such converters are also made using exotic, expensive metal alloys, making them too costly. The press release says that the UC Berkeley study marks the first time the Seebeck effect has been measured in an organic molecule. The research may "lay the groundwork" for the development of more cost-effective thermoelectric converters. UC Berkeley researcher and study co-author Rachel Segalman, explains that "The goal is to make things out of materials that are more abundant and more easily processed . . . Organics are cheap and can be processed easily." The next step for the researchers includes testing different organic molecules and metals, as well as fine-tuning the assembly of their thermoelectric converter. The press release can be viewed online at the link below. The original article may still be available at www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/02/15_heatelectricity.shtml As tagged by Meridian Institute:
Nanomaterials:
Metal Nanoparticle |
Nanotechnology Quintuples Heating Capacity of Solar Water Heaters
-- Renewable Energy Magazine (9/1/2010) Researchers at the University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Brazil, have developed a solar heating system that uses nanotechnology to heat water to five times the temperature of a conventional system, while also permitting the collector surface area to retain up to 98 percent of heat from solar radiation. [More]
Pakistan's Science Minister Attacks Funding Cuts
-- SciDev.Net (9/1/2010) The Pakistan government has cuts its funds for the Pakistan Ministry of Science and Technology's 2010-2011 budget by almost half, causing the science minister, Muhammad Azam Khan Swati, to criticize his own government. [More]
Nanotechnology: Small wonders
-- Nature (9/1/2010) This article takes an in-depth look at the United States National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI)'s first 10 years - to find out where the money went and what the initiative plans to do next. [More]
Nanotech on Farmers' Fields
-- Silicon Nutrition (8/31/2010) A plant nutrition study that addresses nano-sized plant nutrients is now available from the Landbouwkundige Uitgeverij G.C. van den Berg (Veenendaal, The Netherlands). [More]
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