TY - JOUR AU - He, Yongjie AU - Li, Shaowei AU - Chen, Rui AU - Liu, Xu AU - Odunmbaku, George Omololu AU - Fang, Wei AU - Lin, Xiaoxue AU - Ou, Zeping AU - Gou, Qianzhi AU - Wang, Jiacheng AU - Ouedraogo, Nabonswende Aida Nadege AU - Li, Jing AU - Li, Meng AU - Li, Chen AU - Zheng, Yujie AU - Chen, Shanshan AU - Zhou, Yongli AU - Sun, Kuan PY - 2023/04/13 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Ion–Electron Coupling Enables Ionic Thermoelectric Material with New Operation Mode and High Energy Density JF - Nano-Micro Letters JA - Nano-Micro Lett VL - 15 IS - SE - Articles DO - 10.1007/s40820-023-01077-7 UR - https://nmlett.org/index.php/nml/article/view/1334 SP - 101 AB - <p>Ionic thermoelectrics (i-TE) possesses great potential in powering distributed electronics because it can generate thermopower up to tens of millivolts per Kelvin. However, as ions cannot enter external circuit, the utilization of i-TE is currently based on capacitive charge/discharge, which results in discontinuous working mode and low energy density. Here, we introduce an ion–electron thermoelectric synergistic (IETS) effect by utilizing an ion–electron conductor. Electrons/holes can drift under the electric field generated by thermodiffusion of ions, thus converting the ionic current into electrical current that can pass through the external circuit. Due to the IETS effect, i-TE is able to operate continuously for over 3000&nbsp;min. Moreover, our i-TE exhibits a thermopower of 32.7&nbsp;mV&nbsp;K<sup>−1</sup> and an energy density of 553.9&nbsp;J&nbsp;m<sup>−2</sup>, which is more than 6.9 times of the highest reported value. Consequently, direct powering of electronics is achieved with i-TE. This work provides a novel strategy for the design of high-performance i-TE materials.</p><p>Highlights:</p><p>1 An ion–electron coupled thermoelectric material was successfully prepared, which theoretically proved the ion–electron thermoelectric synergy effect and this material can work for a long time, which promoted low-grade thermal energy conversion.<br>2 In the new operating mode of ion–electron thermoelectric synergy effect, our ionic thermoelectrics have a high Seebeck coefficient of 32.7 mV K<sup>−1</sup> and a high energy density of 553.9 J m<sup>−2</sup>, enabling self-power for electronic components.</p> ER -