Molten
salts are widely used as thermal energy storage materials
for solar thermal applications, but they suffer from low photothermal
conversion efficiency and potential leakage and corrosion issues.
In this paper, MXene doping was proposed to improve the thermal properties
and photothermal conversion efficiency of microencapsulated molten
salts. MXene nanomaterials, which have excellent thermal conductivity
and photothermal conversion efficiency, were used to dope the molten
salts. The results tested by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and
energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) indicate that MXene was
well doped in the molten salt microcapsules. Fourier transformation
infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy was used to confirm that the microencapsulation
of the molten salt by silica is a physical action. The results of
X-ray diffractometry (XRD) show that the crystal structure of the
molten salt maintained stability. The results obtained from the Hot
Disk thermal constant analyzer and photothermal conversion experiments
showed that thermal conductivity and photothermal conversion efficiency
of the MXene-doped microcapsules were increased by 156.2% and 169.4%,
respectively. The differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) results
indicated that the MXene-doped microcapsules had a reduction of 49.6%
in the supercooling degree. The thermal reliability of the MXene-doped
microcapsules was 94.0% after 50 thermal cycles. This approach provides
a promising solution for improving the thermal properties and photothermal
conversion efficiency of microencapsulated molten salts for medium-temperature
solar thermal energy storage.
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