This diagram illustrates the substitutional effects of bivalent zinc and nickel cations on the spin thermoelectric properties of cobalt oxide (Co3O4). Image: Nolan Hines, Gustavo Damis Resende, Fernando Siqueira Girondi, Shadrack Ofori-Boadi, Terrence Musho, Anveeksh Koneru.
This diagram illustrates the substitutional effects of bivalent zinc and nickel cations on the spin thermoelectric properties of cobalt oxide (Co3O4). Image: Nolan Hines, Gustavo Damis Resende, Fernando Siqueira Girondi, Shadrack Ofori-Boadi, Terrence Musho, Anveeksh Koneru.

The warmth coming off your computer or cell phone represents wasted energy radiating from the device. With automobiles, it is estimated that 60% of fuel efficiency is lost due to waste heat. Is it possible to capture this energy and convert it into electricity?

Researchers working in the area of thermoelectric power generation say absolutely. But whether it can be done cost-effectively remains a question.

For now, thermoelectric generators are a rarity, used primarily in niche applications like space probes, where refueling is not a possibility. Thermoelectricity is an active area of research, particularly among automobile companies like BMW and Audi. However, to date, the cost of converting heat to electricity has proved to be more expensive than the electricity itself.

Anveeksh Koneru, a senior lecturer in mechanical engineering at The University of Texas Permian Basin (UTPB), is exploring a new method for capturing waste heat by harnessing the quantum mechanical motions of electrons in spin-polarized materials.

In particle physics, spin is an intrinsic form of angular momentum carried by elementary particles, composite particles (hadrons) and atomic nuclei. Through a mechanism known as the Spin Hall effect, it has been shown that a voltage can be generated by harnessing differences in spin populations on a metal contact attached to a ferromagnetic material. First experimentally demonstrated by Japanese researchers in 2008, the idea has since percolated through materials science, but has yet to find its optimal form.

Koneru believes that, in cobalt oxide, he may have found the right material to harness this effect for energy production. An inorganic compound that is used in the ceramics industry to create blue-colored glazes and in water separation technologies, cobalt oxides possess the unique ability to accept substitute transition metal cations, which allows them to be mixed with nickel, copper, manganese or zinc. These metals have magnetic properties that can increase the separation between electrons spinning up and down, and improve the conversion of heat to electricity.

"The material should be a good electrical conductor, but a bad thermal conductor. It should conduct electrons, but not phonons, which are heat," Koneru said. "To study this experimentally, we'd have to fabricate thousands of different combinations of materials. Instead, we're trying to theoretically calculate what the optimal configuration of the material using substitutions is."

Since 2018, Koneru has been using supercomputers at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) to test virtually the energy profiles of a variety of cobalt oxides with a range of substitutions. "Each calibration takes 30 to 40 hours of computing time, and we have to study at least a 1000 to 1500 different configurations," he explained. "It requires a huge computational facility and that's what TACC provides."

Koneru, along with UTPB graduate students Gustavo Damis Resende and Nolan Hines, and Terence Musho, a collaborator from West Virginia University, recently presented their initial findings on the thermoelectric capacity of cobalt oxides at the Materials Research Society Spring Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona.

The researchers studied 56-atom unit cells of three configurations of cobalt oxide, tuned by substitutions of nickel and zinc to attain optimal thermoelectric performance. They used a software package known as Quantum ESPRESSO to calculate fundamental physical properties for each configuration. These included: the band gap, which is the minimum energy required to excite an electron to a state where it conducts energy; the lattice parameter, which describes the physical dimensions of cells in a crystal lattice; the effective mass of conduction electrons, which is the mass that a particle seems to have when responding to force; and the spin polarization, which is the degree to which the spin is aligned with a given direction.

They then used these fundamental properties to perform conventional charge and spin transport calculations, which tell the researchers how well each configuration of the cobalt oxide can turn heat into electricity. According to the researchers, the method developed in this research can be applied to other interesting thermoelectric materials with semiconducting and magnetic properties, making it broadly useful for the materials science community.

As a PhD student at West Virginia University, Koneru had access to large supercomputers to conduct his research. Although UTPB does not have such resources locally, he was able to tap into the advanced computing systems and services of TACC through the UT Research Cyberinfrastructure (UTRC) initiative. Since 2007, this initiative has provided researchers at any of the University of Texas System's 14 institutions with access to TACC's resources, expertise and training.

As part of the UTRC initiative, TACC staff serve as liaisons, visiting UT System's 14 campuses to offer training and consultation, and to introduce researchers to the resources available to them. When TACC researcher Ari Kahn visited UTPB, he met Koneru and encouraged him to compute at TACC.

Since then, Koneru has been using Lonestar5, a system exclusively for UT System researchers, for his work. Though still at an early stage, the results so far have been promising.

"I'm excited because we could clearly see spin polarization when cobalt oxide spinels were substituted with nickel. That's a good sign," he said. "We're seeing that one particular configuration has a higher split in band-gap, something that's surprising and we have to explore further. And all the calibrations are converging, which shows they're reliable."

Once he identifies the optimal material for waste-heat conversion, Koneru hopes to engineer a paste that could be applied to the tailpipe of a vehicle, converting waste heat into electricity to power a car's electrical systems. He estimates that such a device could cost less than $500 per vehicle and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by hundreds of millions of tons annually.

"With the recent advances in nanofabrication, and computational calibrations for nanomaterials, spin-thermal materials can play a vital role in energy conversion in the future," he said.

This story is adapted from material from the Texas Advanced Computing Center, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.