The present invention relates to micron-gap thermal photovoltaic (MTPV) technology for conversion of radiated thermal power to electrical power. While the use of micron-gaps and submicron-gaps between a hot-side emitter and a cold side collector enable an increase in power density of an order of magnitude over more conventional thermovoltaic devices, there may also be a commensurate increase in temperature of the cold-side collector due to absorption of out-of-band thermal radiation by the cold side collector. In order to maintain efficiency of the cold-side collector and uniform gap separation between the hot-side emitter and the cold-side collector, various means have been employed to maintain the cold-side collector at a reduced temperature. The present invention relates more particularly to a novel method and device for maintaining a relatively low temperature of the cold-side collector through the use of a microchannel heat sink employing a liquid coolant.
The present invention provides a novel method and device for maintaining a low temperature of a cold-side collector for improving the efficiency of a sub-micron gap thermophotovoltaic cell structure. An embodiment of a typical sub-micron gap thermophotovoltaic cell structure according to the present invention may comprise multiple layers compressed together so that the sub-micron gap dimension is relatively constant although the layer boundaries may not be substantially flat compared to the relatively constant sub-micron dimension. The layered structure may comprise a hot side thermal emitter having a surface separated from a photovoltaic cell surface by a sub-micron gap having a dimension maintained by spacers. The surface of the photovoltaic cell opposite the sub-micron gap is compressibly positioned against a surface of a microchannel heat sink and the surface of the microchannel heat sink opposite the photovoltaic cell is compressibly positioned against a flat rigid plate layer separated by a compressible layer or “sponge”. Forcibly positioned against the side of the flat rigid plate opposite the compressible layer is a force mechanism for compressing the layers of the sub-micron gap photovoltaic cell structure into close contact with one another in order to maintain a uniform gap dimension between the surface of the hot side thermal emitter and the opposing surface of the photovoltaic cell. The force mechanism may be, for example, a piezoelectric force transducer, or a pneumatic or hydraulic chamber containing a fluid maintained under a controllable pressure by an external source. Note that a piezoelectric transducer array may provide an active compressing force in a Z-dimension perpendicular to the surfaces of the substrate layers, as described above, and passive forces in an X-dimension and a Y-dimension for counteracting irregular surfaces, while minimizing in-plane stresses on the layers.
The microchannel heat sink includes an input manifold for receiving a suitable coolant from an external source. The coolant is forced under pressure from the input manifold through multiple microchannels beneath a surface of the microchannel heat sink where the coolant absorbs heat energy. The heated coolant is then passed to an exhaust manifold where it is returned to the external source for cooling and further processing.
The benefits of the microchannel heat sink method described above over prior methods are that a liquid metal layer is no longer required, mechanical bellows are eliminated, and the effect of fluid flow forces on the stack are eliminated. Furthermore. the need to regulate liquid metal pressure, in accordance with axial compressive force, is eliminated, reducing hardware requirements and complexity.
This Summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the Detailed Description. This Summary is not intended to identify all key or essential features of the claimed matter, nor is it intended to be used to limit the scope of the claimed subject matter.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description and accompanying drawings wherein:
Considering
An external surface of the containment plate 135 is compressibly positioned against a flat rigid plate 155 separated by a compressible layer 150. The compressive layer 150 needs to compress enough to provide enough force to make all layers, including the microchannel heat sink 125, take on a common shape, consistent with the enclosure. The heat sink 125 is made thin to allow for bending on the level of tens of microns. The compressible layer 150 will not have uniform thickness when compressed due to the non-flatness of the other layers. Therefore, the stiffness and thickness of the compressible layer 150 are carefully chosen to minimize pressure variation across the gap 112. For example, the compressible layer 150 may be 1000 micro thick foam that compresses an average of 100 microns due to the application of force. Also, if the thickness variation of the compressible layer 150 is 10 microns due to surface variations of the layers being compressed, then there would be 10% variation in pressure applied to the microchannel heat sink. Further reduction in the compressive stiffness of the foam would reduce this pressure variation.
A force mechanism 160 is compressibly positioned on the surface of the rigid plate opposite the compressible layer 150. The force mechanism 160 applies a compressing force against the other layers for maintaining a relatively constant sub-micron gap dimension in spite of non-uniform surface flatness of the substrate layers. An input connector 170 may be provided for providing compressing energy 185 to the force mechanism 160 and an output connector 165 may be provided as a return 180 for the compressing energy from the force mechanism 160. If, for example, the force mechanism 160 is implemented with piezoelectric transducers, the connectors 170, 165 may be electrical connections. If the force mechanism 160 is a pneumatic implementation, the connectors 170, 165 may be pneumatic connectors.
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The channel plate 220 may be fabricated from silicon and micro-machined to provide the input manifold 240, the microchannels 230 and the exhaust manifold 210, using conventional photolithography and etching techniques. The containment plate 260 may also be fabricated from silicon, and bonded to the channel plate 220 using adhesives such as epoxy or other wafer bonding techniques such as glass frit and thermal compression.
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Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are disclosed as example forms of implementing the claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61790429 | Mar 2013 | US |