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Main Authors: Assawaworrarit, Sid, Zhou, Ming, Fan, Lingling, Fan, Shanhui
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.17751
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author Assawaworrarit, Sid
Zhou, Ming
Fan, Lingling
Fan, Shanhui
author_facet Assawaworrarit, Sid
Zhou, Ming
Fan, Lingling
Fan, Shanhui
contents The coldness of the universe is a thermodynamic resource that has largely remained untapped for renewable energy generation. Recently, a growing interest in this area has led to a number of studies with the aim to realize the potential of tapping this vast resource for energy generation. While the theoretical calculation based on thermodynamic principles places an upper limit in the power density at the level of 6000 mW/m$^2$, most experimental demonstrations so far result in much lower power density at the level of tens of mW/m$^2$. Here we demonstrate, through design optimization involving the tailoring of the thermal radiation spectrum, the minimization of parasitic heat leakage, and the maximum conversion of heat to electricity, an energy generation system harvesting electricity from the thermal radiation of the ambient heat to the cold universe that achieves a sustained power density of 350 mW/m$^2$. We further demonstrate a power density at the 1000 mW/m$^2$ level using an additional heat source or heat storage that provides access to heat at a temperature above ambient. Our work here shows that the coldness of the universe can be harvested to generate renewable energy at the power density level that approaches the established bound.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2407_17751
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Record nighttime electric power generation at a density of 350 mW/m$^2$ via radiative cooling
Assawaworrarit, Sid
Zhou, Ming
Fan, Lingling
Fan, Shanhui
Applied Physics
The coldness of the universe is a thermodynamic resource that has largely remained untapped for renewable energy generation. Recently, a growing interest in this area has led to a number of studies with the aim to realize the potential of tapping this vast resource for energy generation. While the theoretical calculation based on thermodynamic principles places an upper limit in the power density at the level of 6000 mW/m$^2$, most experimental demonstrations so far result in much lower power density at the level of tens of mW/m$^2$. Here we demonstrate, through design optimization involving the tailoring of the thermal radiation spectrum, the minimization of parasitic heat leakage, and the maximum conversion of heat to electricity, an energy generation system harvesting electricity from the thermal radiation of the ambient heat to the cold universe that achieves a sustained power density of 350 mW/m$^2$. We further demonstrate a power density at the 1000 mW/m$^2$ level using an additional heat source or heat storage that provides access to heat at a temperature above ambient. Our work here shows that the coldness of the universe can be harvested to generate renewable energy at the power density level that approaches the established bound.
title Record nighttime electric power generation at a density of 350 mW/m$^2$ via radiative cooling
topic Applied Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.17751