Publication | Closed Access
Promoting Energy Efficiency via a Self‐Adaptive Evaporative Cooling Hydrogel
256
Citations
31
References
2020
Year
EngineeringEnergy EfficiencyPhotovoltaic DevicesThermal Energy StorageWater MoleculesPhotovoltaicsHydrogelsChemical EngineeringSolar Cell StructuresSolar Thermal EnergySolar Energy UtilisationMaterials ScienceEnergy StorageHeat TransferSolar CoolingBiopolymer GelThermal EngineeringPolymer ScienceBromine-enriched Polyacrylamide HydrogelSolar CellsHigh Temperature
High temperature brings adverse impacts on the energy efficiency, and even destroys a semiconductor device. Here, a novel and cost-effective strategy is proposed to boost the energy efficiency of semiconductor devices by using the self-adaptive evaporative cooling of a lithium- and bromine-enriched polyacrylamide hydrogel. Water inside the hydrogel can quickly evaporate to dissipate the waste heat generated by the nugatory carrier transport in the P-N junction. In dormancy, the hydrogel harvests water molecules from the surrounding air to regenerate itself. The hydrogel is demonstrated to low down the operating temperature of a commercial polycrystalline silicon solar cell by 17 °C under one sun condition and enhances its efficiency from 14.5% to 15.5%. It is also capable of increasing the maximum power of a simulated chip by 45% at a fixed operating temperature. The hydrogel is expected to be widely adopted in current semiconductor industry to improve its energy efficiency.
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