Michael Strano, MIT:
Thermopower Waves Opens New Energy Research Area
March 15, 2010
A team of scientists at MIT have discovered a previously unknown
phenomenon that can cause powerful waves of energy to shoot through
minuscule wires known as carbon nanotubes. The discovery could lead to a
new way of producing electricity, the researchers say.
A reaction wave travels across a
centimeter-long bundle of carbon nanotubes in 100 ms, consuming the
energetic fuel with which they are coated. The reaction is initiated by
a pulse of heat at the right side, in this case a small butane flame.
The phenomenon, described as thermopower waves, “opens up a new area of
energy research, which is rare,” says Michael Strano, MIT’s Charles and
Hilda Roddey Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering, who was the
senior author of a paper describing the new findings that appeared in
Nature Materials on March 7. The lead author was Wonjoon Choi, a
doctoral student in mechanical engineering.
Like a collection of flotsam propelled along the surface by waves
traveling across the ocean, it turns out that a thermal wave — a moving
pulse of heat — traveling along a microscopic wire can drive electrons
along, creating an electrical current.
The key ingredient in the recipe is carbon nanotubes — submicroscopic
hollow tubes made of a chicken-wire-like lattice of carbon atoms. These
tubes, just a few billionths of a meter (nanometers) in diameter, are
part of a family of novel carbon molecules, including buckyballs and
graphene sheets, that have been the subject of intensive worldwide
research over the last two decades.
A previously unknown phenomenon
In the new experiments, each of these electrically and thermally
conductive nanotubes was coated with a layer of a reactive fuel that can
produce heat by decomposing. This fuel was then ignited at one end of
the nanotube using either a laser beam or a high-voltage spark, and the
result was a fast-moving thermal wave traveling along the length of the
carbon nanotube like a flame speeding along the length of a lit fuse.
Heat from the fuel goes into the nanotube, where it travels thousands of
times faster than in the fuel itself. As the heat feeds back to the fuel
coating, a thermal wave is created that is guided along the nanotube.
With a temperature of 3,000 kelvins, this ring of heat speeds along the
tube 10,000 times faster than the normal spread of this chemical
reaction. The heating produced by that combustion, it turns out, also
pushes electrons along the tube, creating a substantial electrical
current.
Combustion waves — like this pulse of heat hurtling along a wire — “have
been studied mathematically for more than 100 years,” Strano says, but
he was the first to predict that such waves could be guided by a
nanotube or nanowire and that this wave of heat could push an electrical
current along that wire.
In the group’s initial experiments, Strano says, when they wired up the
carbon nanotubes with their fuel coating in order to study the reaction,
“lo and behold, we were really surprised by the size of the resulting
voltage peak” that propagated along the wire.
After further development, the system now puts out energy, in proportion
to its weight, about 100 times greater than an equivalent weight of
lithium-ion battery.
The amount of power released, he says, is much greater than that
predicted by thermoelectric calculations. While many semiconductor
materials can produce an electric potential when heated, through
something called the Seebeck effect, that effect is very weak in carbon.
“There’s something else happening here,” he says. “We call it electron
entrainment, since part of the current appears to scale with wave
velocity.”
The thermal wave, he explains, appears to be entraining the electrical
charge carriers (either electrons or electron holes) just as an ocean
wave can pick up and carry a collection of debris along the surface.
This important property is responsible for the high power produced by
the system, Strano says.
Exploring possible applications
Because this is such a new discovery, he says, it’s hard to predict
exactly what the practical applications will be. But he suggests that
one possible application would be in enabling new kinds of ultra-small
electronic devices — for example, devices the size of grains of rice,
perhaps with sensors or treatment devices that could be injected into
the body. Or it could lead to “environmental sensors that could be
scattered like dust in the air,” he says.
In theory, he says, such devices could maintain their power indefinitely
until used, unlike batteries whose charges leak away gradually as they
sit unused. And while the individual nanowires are tiny, Strano suggests
that they could be made in large arrays to supply significant amounts of
power for larger devices.
The
researchers also plan to pursue another aspect of their theory: that by
using different kinds of reactive materials for the coating, the wave
front could oscillate, thus producing an alternating current. That would
open up a variety of possibilities, Strano says, because alternating
current is the basis for radio waves such as cell phone transmissions,
but present energy-storage systems all produce direct current. “Our
theory predicted these oscillations before we began to observe them in
our data,” he says.
Also, the present versions of the system have low efficiency, because a
great deal of power is being given off as heat and light. The team plans
to work on improving that efficiency.
Ray Baughman, director of the Nanotech Institute at the University of
Texas at Dallas, who was not involved in this work, calls the research
“stellar.”
The work, Baughman says, “started with a seminal initial idea, which
some might find crazy, and provided exciting experimental results, the
discovery of new phenomena, deep theoretical understanding, and
prospects for applications.” Because it uncovered a previously unknown
phenomenon, he says, it could open up “an exciting new area of
investigation.”