Integration of Liquid Thermoelectrochemical Conversion into Forced Convection Cooling
Yutaka Ikeda, Kazuki Fukui, Yoichi Murakami

TL;DR
This paper introduces a thermoelectrochemical system integrated with forced convection cooling that can recover some of the lost exergy as electricity, potentially improving energy efficiency in cooling applications.
Contribution
It presents a novel thermoelectrochemical conversion method integrated into forced convection cooling, demonstrating power generation with a gain ratio above unity under certain conditions.
Findings
Higher performance with narrower interelectrode channels.
Mass transfer resistance dominates overall resistance.
Power generation depends on flow rate and temperature-induced diffusion changes.
Abstract
Forced convection cooling is important in numerous technologies ranging from microprocessors in data centers to turbines and engines; active cooling is essential in these situations. However, active transfer of heat or thermal energy under a large temperature difference promptly destroys the exergy, which is the free-energy component of thermal energy, and this issue has remained unaddressed. Herein, we describe a thermoelectrochemical conversion to partially recover presently lost exergy in forced convection cooling. We design a test cell in which an electrolyte liquid is forced through a channel formed between two parallel electrodes and the hot-side electrode simulates an object to be cooled. Our investigations show that the narrower interelectrode channels afford higher cooling and power generation performances. The mass transfer resistance is the most dominant type of resistance…
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