In recent years, the problem of overheating
in summer has been
of great concern. Pavements are continuously exposed to solar radiation,
and because of high temperatures, pavement temperatures reach 60 to
70 °C. This potential low-grade heat has been unused. Cement-based
composites with thermoelectric properties can convert this low-grade
heat to useful electrical energy. The importance of this green technology
for generating renewable energy and sustainable development has been
widely accepted and noticed. However, the power factor of current
cement-based composites is too low, and harvesting low-grade heat
on a large scale and at low cost requires improving the thermoelectric
properties of cement-based composites. In this paper, we present a
method to increase the electrical conductivity of ZnO and thus improve
the thermoelectric properties of cement-based composites by defect
engineering, obtaining a high power factor of 224 μWm–1 K–2 at 70 °C, a record value recently reported
for thermoelectric cement-based composites. Zinc oxide powder was
treated with a reducing atmosphere to increase the content of oxygen
defects and thus improve the electrical conductivity. Pretreated ZnO
powder of 5.0 and 10.0 wt % expanded graphite were added to the cement
matrix. The ZnO/expanded graphite cement-based composites were made
and tested for their thermoelectric properties using a dry pressing
process, which exhibited excellent thermoelectric properties. The
result showed high conductivity (12.78 S·cm–1), a high Seebeck coefficient (−419 μV/°C), a high
power factor (224 μWm–1 K–2), and a high figure of merit value (8.7 × 10–3), which facilitate future large-scale applications. Using the cement-based
composites to lay a road of 1 km in length and 10 m in width, 35.2
kW·h of electricity can be collected in 8 h. This study will
inspire how to improve thermoelectric performance of cement-based
composites.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.