Abstract
Liquid thermocells are promising devices for the recovery of low-grade waste heat and its conversion into electricity. The present study proposes dispersing charged magnetic nanoparticles in liquids to improve thermoelectric conversion, due to their thermo-diffusive and magnetic properties. Core-shell cobalt ferrite@maghemite nanoparticles (NPs) of various sizes with three different kinds of coatings are tested for dispersion in EMIM TFSI (ethyl-methylimidazolium bistriflimide), an ionic liquid (IL) of high electrical conductivity. Among the tested ligands, PAC6MIM+- (1-(6-hexylphosphonate) 3-methyl imidazolium bromide) emerges as the most efficient due to its phosphonic group. This ligand leads to dispersions of aggregates of a few dozen NPs in water and a few NPs in EMIM TFSI. For improving both the viscosity and the electrical conductivity, dispersions in binary mixtures of propylene carbonate (PC), a polar medium, and EMIM-TFSI are further investigated with the sample based on NPs of around 9 nm diameter. Through a pumping and heating procedure, stable dispersions are obtained with a subsequent reduction of the size of the NP aggregates, down to 1 to 2 NPs in EMIM TFSI and a few NPs in PC and their binary mixtures. The mixture with an IL mole fraction around 0.2-0.3 and maximal electrical conductivity is a promising candidate for further thermoelectric investigations.
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