Optimal Geometric Design of Thermoelectric Metamaterials for Enhancing Power Generation: An Interpretative Approach
Xanthippi Zianni

TL;DR
This paper introduces a universal geometric descriptor called Transmissivity for designing thermoelectric metamaterials, demonstrating how constricted geometries influence performance and providing a framework for optimized energy conversion devices.
Contribution
It develops a formalism linking geometry to thermoelectric performance using Transmissivity, offering a unified design and optimization approach for constricted thermoelectric metamaterials.
Findings
Transmissivity effectively characterizes constricted geometries.
Hourglass-shaped legs share transport mechanisms with other constrictions.
Contact resistance significantly impacts performance gains.
Abstract
Thermoelectric metamaterials featuring width modulation through constrictions (constricted geometries) have emerged as a promising approach for improving heat management and thermoelectric performance. Through a combination of theoretical calculations, analytical formalism, and validation against experimental data, it is shown that thermoelectric performance in such geometries is governed by two fundamental mechanisms of pure geometrical origin: (i) a characteristic scaling behavior of resistance with Transmissivity, and (ii) the critical formation of the Constriction Thermal Resistance. Hourglass-shaped thermoelectric legs - identified as optimal in recent experiments - are found to exhibit the same underlying transport mechanisms observed in other constricted profiles, including single and multiple sharp constrictions. The commonly used Geometric Parameter is found to be insufficient…
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