Abstract
Thermionic conversion, due to its simple solid-state structure capable of converting heat to electricity directly, is promising for concentrated solar power. However, because of the extremely high cathode temperature, a large portion of the heat is lost to the environment. The paper introduces a novel concept of selective thermoradiative-graphene thermionic conversion (STR-GTI) that involving a combined control of photon and electron emission to modify the radiation dissipation. A detailed thermodynamic model is developed to evaluate the energy transfer irreversibility of STR-GTI solar conversion. The results demonstrate that the selective themoradiative photon emission and graphene thermionic electron emission effects synergistically reduce internal irreversible losses in the STR-GTI system, leading to a maximum energy efficiency of 34.34 % at a concentration ratio of 425, cathode work function of 1.8 eV and thermoradiative bandgap of 0.2 eV. The STR-GTI system outperforms both individual GTI and STR converters in terms of exergy efficiency and entropy production minimization. It exhibits a remarkable 102.03 % increase in exergy efficiency compared to the STR & GTI system at a thermoradiative voltage of −0.14 eV, accompanied by a 28.56 % reduction in exergy loss and a 37.83 % decrease in entropy production. The combination of narrowing the spectral radiation bandwidth and significant electron emission capabilities of graphene contribute to the system’s resilience against solar radiation fluctuations.
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