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Si0.97Ge0.03 microelectronic thermoelectric generators with high power and voltage densities.


ABSTRACT: Microelectronic thermoelectric generators are one potential solution to energizing energy autonomous electronics, such as internet-of-things sensors, that must carry their own power source. However, thermoelectric generators with the mm2 footprint area necessary for on-chip integration made from high thermoelectric figure-of-merit materials have been unable to produce the voltage and power levels required to run Si electronics using common temperature differences. We present microelectronic thermoelectric generators using Si0.97Ge0.03, made by standard Si processing, with high voltage and power generation densities that are comparable to or better than generators using high figure-of-merit materials. These Si-based thermoelectric generators have <1 mm2 areas and can energize off-the-shelf sensor integrated circuits using temperature differences ?25?K near room temperature. These generators can be directly integrated with Si circuits and scaled up in area to generate voltages and powers competitive with existing thermoelectric technologies, but in what should be a far more cost-effective manner.

SUBMITTER: Dhawan R 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7458905 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Si<sub>0.97</sub>Ge<sub>0.03</sub> microelectronic thermoelectric generators with high power and voltage densities.

Dhawan Ruchika R   Madusanka Prabuddha P   Hu Gangyi G   Debord Jeff J   Tran Toan T   Maggio Kenneth K   Edwards Hal H   Lee Mark M  

Nature communications 20200831 1


Microelectronic thermoelectric generators are one potential solution to energizing energy autonomous electronics, such as internet-of-things sensors, that must carry their own power source. However, thermoelectric generators with the mm<sup>2</sup> footprint area necessary for on-chip integration made from high thermoelectric figure-of-merit materials have been unable to produce the voltage and power levels required to run Si electronics using common temperature differences. We present microelec  ...[more]

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