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12 de noviembre de 2022

Científicos crean cristales que generan electricidad a partir del calor



Redacción Digital/regionalpuebla.mx


Mineral de sulfuro sintético con propiedades termoeléctricas




En un esfuerzo por convertir eficientemente el calor en electricidad, los materiales de fácil acceso a partir de materias primas inocuas abren nuevos horizontes en el desarrollo de los llamados materiales termoeléctricos seguros y económicos. El metal de cobre sintético adquiere una estructura y una microestructura complejas a través de simples cambios en su composición, sentando así las bases para las propiedades deseadas, según un estudio publicado recientemente en la revista. Anguandt Kimi.

El nuevo material sintético está hecho de cobre, manganeso, germanio y azufre, y se produce en un proceso bastante simple, explica el científico de materiales Emmanuel Gilmou, investigador del CNRS en el Laboratorio CRISMAT, Caen, Francia, y autor correspondiente del estudio. . “Los polvos se mezclan mecánicamente mediante molienda de bolas para formar una fase de precristalización, que luego se condensa a 600 grados.[{» attribute=»»>Celsius. This process can be easily scaled up,” he says.

Thermoelectric materials convert heat to electricity. This is especially useful in industrial processes where waste heat is reused as valuable electric power. The converse approach is the cooling of electronic parts, for example, in smartphones or cars. Materials used in these kinds of applications have to be not only efficient, but also inexpensive and, above all, safe for health.

However, thermoelectric devices used to date make use of expensive and toxic elements such as lead and tellurium, which offer the best conversion efficiency. To find safer alternatives, Emmanuel Guilmeau and his team have turned to derivatives of natural copper-based sulfide minerals. These mineral derivatives are mainly composed of nontoxic and abundant elements, and some of them have thermoelectric properties.

Now, the team has succeeded in producing a series of thermoelectric materials showing two crystal structures within the same material. “We were very surprised at the result. Usually, slightly changing the composition has little effect on the structure in this class of materials,” says Emmanuel Guilmeau describing their discovery.

The team found that replacing a small fraction of the manganese with copper produced complex microstructures with interconnected nanodomains, defects, and coherent interfaces, which affected the material’s transport properties for electrons and heat.

Emmanuel Guilmeau says that the novel material produced is stable up to 400 degrees Celsius (750 degrees Fahrenheit), a range well within the waste heat temperature range of most industries. He is convinced that, based on this discovery, novel cheaper, and nontoxic thermoelectric materials could be designed to replace more problematic materials.

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