2011 Annual Meeting
(283a) Segregated Network Polymer Nanocomposites for Thermoelectric Energy Conversion
Authors
Jaime C. Grunlan - Presenter, Texas A&M University
Choongho Yu - Presenter, Texas A&M University
Greg Moriarty - Presenter, Texas A&M University
Segregated network (latex-based) composites containing carbon nanotubes can produce electricity from a thermal gradient. These thermoelectric materials harvest electricity from waste heat or any temperature gradient in the environment. The present work demonstrates that nanotube-filled polymer composites can be viable for light-weight and economical thermoelectric energy conversion. By combining double-walled carbon nanotubes (DWNTs), stabilized with poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene): poly(styrene sulfonate) [PEDOT:PSS] in water, an electrical conductivity (σ) near 2000 S/cm is achieved in a poly(vinyl acetate) [PVAc] latex-based matrix. When this conductivity is combined with a Seebeck coefficient (S) above 40 mV/K, a power factor (S2σ) above 370 mW/m·K2 is achieved at room temperature. Thermal conductivity (k) of these composites can be tailored between 0.3 and 10 W/m∙K, suggesting the thermoelectric figure of merit (ZT = S2σT/k) could be as high as 0.4 at room temperature, which would make these fully organic composites competitive with bismuth telluride (i.e., the most efficient thermoelectric material) at room temperature.