Abstract
The concepts of dual leg, unileg and transversal oxide thermoelectric harvesting devices were compared with regard to the dimensionless figure of merit calculated from published data on common dual leg oxide thermoelectric generators. The analysis shows that the application of the transversal thermoelectric effect does not significantly reduce the expected electrical output power density of thermoelectric devices utilizing thermoelectric oxides. At the same time, the transversal device layout is simple in comparison to the common dual leg device. A transversal thermoelectric harvester consisting of a tilted multilayer stack La1.97Sr0.03CuO4/Ag was prepared and analyzed in detail. Simulations using the finite elements method were performed to verify the results. Based on this data, the electrical power density of the transversal oxide-metal device is estimated to be in the range of currently published data on oxide dual leg devices, thus allowing energy harvesting for low power applications.
Introduction
Ceramic materials have been in the focus of thermoelectric application for almost 20 years (Ohtaki et al. 1995; Terasaki, Sasago, and Uchinokura 1997). Although the thermoelectric performance data of thermoelectric oxides are inferior to classic thermoelectric materials based on BiTe/PbTe semimetallic alloys, some aspects related to potential application conditions, particularly the stability at high temperatures of a number of ceramic thermoelectric materials, still induce a large number of studies that aim of improving the material properties. This is accompanied by research efforts to implement oxide materials in thermoelectric devices (Shin et al. 2000; Matsubara et al. 2001; Funahashi et al. 2004; Noudem et al. 2008; Tomeš et al. 2010; Feldhoff and Geppert 2014). The integration of oxide materials for thermoelectric harvesting devices typically includes monolithic blocks of n- and p-type ceramics. Alternatively, large-scale ceramic multilayer technology represents an attractive option to manufacture oxides thermoelectric generators (TEG). Ceramic multilayer technologies, including low-temperature co-firing, are well established for the industrial production of electronic components, e.g. resistors, capacitors, inductors and microsystems (Imanaka 2005). Recently, Hayashi et al. (2010) and Funahashi et al. (2011) demonstrated the preparation of monolithic TEG based on a multilayer co-fired ceramic technology. To build up a multilayer-type TEG it is necessary to combine and co-fire p-type and n-type thermoelectric oxides, an insulating material as well as a suitable metal to connect the thermoelectric layers accordingly. Alternatively, the internal contacts between the p- and n-layers can be realized without using an additional metal component (Hayashi et al. 2010, Funahashi et al. 2011). However, in this case it has to be ensured that the direct contacts between the p- and n-materials exhibit a low-contact resistance. Critical material and process parameters for the application of ceramic multilayer technologies are the shrinkage and sintering behaviors of the different ceramic green tapes. In addition, thermal expansion mismatch must be avoided. Implementation of these constraint conditions may reduce the performance reached for individually optimized thermoelectric materials. The reduction of the number of components used for co-firing a ceramic multilayer TEG and, hence, reducing the complexity of the device fabrication, may therefore be beneficial for the performance of the TEG.
In this paper, we discuss various TEG device concepts assuming the application of ceramic multilayer technologies for the fabrication of low-power energy harvesting generator systems. The assessment of TEG concepts is conducted with special emphasis on possible simplifications of the device layout and not exclusively driven by the premise of a maximum thermodynamic efficiency. Simple thermoelectric devices may show enhanced long-term reliability and low production costs, while at the same time generating sufficient output power to drive sensor or radio applications. A simple theoretical description is used to compare different device concepts, i.e. dual-leg, unileg and transversal multilayer TEGs. A simple transversal thermoelectric energy harvester was prepared. Its thermoelectric performance was evaluated and compared with simulations.
Theoretical Background and Device Concepts
In this section, the theoretical background of three different device concepts feasible within the multilayer technology is evaluated: (i) dual leg thermocouple; (ii) unileg thermocouple; and (iii) transversal thermocouple (Figure 1). The dual leg thermocouple corresponds to the usual setup of thermoelectric devices consisting of p- and n-type conducting thermoelectric materials. The unileg thermocouple follows the same setup. However, in this case a metal is used in combination with a thermoelectric oxide (Lemonnier et al. 2008). The dual leg as well as the unileg device can be addressed using the same theoretical framework. The transversal TEG contains two different materials in an alternating layer stack. The layer stack is tilted at a certain angle with respect to the applied temperature gradient. The transversal device will be discussed assuming a material combination of a thermoelectric oxide and a metal for the alternating layers.

Scheme of the layer stack for (a) dual leg, (b) unileg and (c) transversal thermoelectric device;
In the case of dual leg as well as unileg devices the electrical and the thermal current flows are aligned in parallel (longitudinal thermoelectric effect), whereas in a transversal thermocouple the electrical current is oriented perpendicularly to the external temperature gradient.
In order to compare these three device concepts the dimensionless figure of merit
with
using
containing only
Equations [1]–[4] describe the longitudinal thermoelectric effect, thus the dual leg as well as unileg devices, respectively. In the latter case one set of transport parameters has to be replaced by the metal parameters
Apart from common longitudinal thermoelectric effect described, the existence of a transversal thermoelectric effect was shown theoretically (Voigt 1910) and experimentally (Reddemann 1937) a long time ago. In this case, the temperature gradient is aligned perpendicularly to the resulting electrical potential (Figure 1(c)). The prerequisite of the occurrence of this effect is anisotropy of the electrical transport in the thermoelectric material. Particularly single crystals (Gallo, Chandrasekhar, and Sutter 1963) or epitaxially grown layers (Schnellbögl et al. 1992; Kanno et al. 2014) with native anisotropic electrical properties are suitable to generate a transversal thermoelectric potential. The possibility to use artificially created anisotropic materials for thermoelectric power generators based on the transverse thermoelectric effect was elaborated theoretically in detail by Babin et al. in 1974 (Babin et al. 1974). Initial experimental data on tilted layer stacks of Bi/Bi0.5Sb1.5Te3 were published by Gudkin et al. in 1978 (Gudkin, Iordanishvili, and Fiskind 1978). It also has to be mentioned that the application of anisotropic thermoelectric materials has been discussed recently (Snarskii and Bulat 2006; Reitmaier, Walther, and Lengfellner 2010; Goldsmid 2012; Takahashi et al. 2013, Zhou et al. 2013).
For the further discussion, the combination of a thermoelectric oxide and a metal will be supposed. The oxide-metal layer stack is tilted at the angle
with the not maximized figure of merit
The parameters of interest are the Seebeck coefficient

Illustration for the definition of the coordinate system for the theoretical description of the transversal thermocouple consisting of alternating stacked materials.
The resulting figure of merit of the transversal thermoelectric effect
Using the conditions
Babin et al. (1974) derived a simplified expression for the maximum figure of merit
Equation [14] reveals that the figure of merit
The estimated thickness ratio
If the internal resistance of the transversal thermocouple is equal to the external load then the electrical power per unit area can be expressed as
with
In order to discuss the performance potential of the different device types, previously published data on full oxide dual leg devices are used. The transport properties of the corresponding thermoelectric oxides were estimated in the low (300–400 K) and medium temperature (800 K) range. For some devices no thermal conductivity data of the materials used was given in the original reports of the devices. In these cases the thermal conductivity was estimated based on additional literature describing similar materials. The metal transport properties were estimated assuming the application of a commercial Ag paste typically used in ceramic multilayer technology (Heraeus 2014). The room temperature resistivity
Combining all transport data it is possible to calculate the figures of merit of the individual materials
Summary of published and calculated data for different device structures.
| T | p-material |
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n-material |
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| K | Ωm | µV/K | W/mK | Ωm | µV/K | W/mK | |||||||
| 400 | Li0.025Ni0.975O | 6.7E-5 | 80 | 12.0 | 3.2E-03 | Ba0.4Sr0.6PbO3 | 1.3E-4 | 90 | 2.0 | 3.2E-5 | 0.7 | 1.3 | Shin et al. (2000); Shin and Murayama (1999); Yasukawa and Murayama (1998) |
| 800 | Li0.025Ni0.975O | 5.0E-5 | 50 | 10.0 | 4.0E-03 | Ba0.4Sr0.6PbO3 | 5.0E-5 | 100 | 2.0 | 1.0E-4 | 0.5 | 0.7 | |
| 800 | Ca2.75Gd0.25Co4O9 | 7.8E-3 | 185 | 1.6 | 2.2E-03 | Ca0.92La0.08MnO3 | 6.6E-3 | 120 | 2.0 | 1.1E-6 | 0.8 | 0.8 | Matsubara et al. (2001); Liu et al. (2009); Funahashi et al. (2007) |
| 800 | Ca2.8Bi0.2Co4O9 | 2.0E-4 | 150 | 0.6 | 1.4E-01 | Ca0.98Sm0.02MnO3 | 1.4E-4 | 180 | 1.6 | 1.5E-4 | 1.9 | 1.6 | Su et al. (2011) |
| 800 | Na(Co0.95Ni0.05)2O4 | 1.3E-4 | 350 | 2.0 | 3.9E-01 | Zn0.99Sn0.01O | 4.7E-5 | 175 | 3.0 | 2.2E-4 | 1.2 | 1.0 | Park, Choi, and Lee (2009); Wang, Wang, and Zhao (2009); Ohtaki, Araki, and Yamamoto (2009) |
| 400 | La1.98Sr0.02CuO4 | 3.0E-4 | 270 | 2.5 | 3.9E-02 | CaMn0.98Nb0.02O3 | 2.2E-4 | 200 | 2.5 | 7.3E-5 | 1.1 | 0.9 | Tomeš et al. (2010) |
| 800 | La1.98Sr0.02CuO4 | 4.0E-4 | 130 | 1.8 | 1.9E-02 | CaMn0.98Nb0.02O3 | 3.2E-4 | 250 | 1.8 | 1.1E-4 | 0.8 | 0.6 | |
| 400 | La1.97Sr0.03CuO4 | 1.5E-4 | 214 | 6.0 | 2.0E-02 | Nd1.97Ce0.03CuO4 | 4.8E-4 | 158 | 3.5 | 1.5E-5 | 0.7 | 0.4 | Hayashi et al. (2010) |
| 400 | Ca3Co4O9 | 3.3E-5 | 82 | 1.6 | 5.0E-02 | Ca0.9Nd0.1MnO3 | 9.1E-5 | 141 | 3.5 | 6.3E-5 | 1.7 | 1.2 | Lim et al. (2012); Zhang and Zhang (2008); Funahashi et al. (2007) |
| 800 | Ca3Co4O9 | 4.5E-5 | 121 | 1.6 | 1.6E-01 | Ca0.9Nd0.1MnO3 | 8.0E-5 | 167 | 3.5 | 1.0E-4 | 2.1 | 1.3 | |
| 300 | Ni0.9Mo0.1 | 1.3E-6 | 20 | 6.6 | 1.4E-02 | La0.035Sr0.965TiO3 | 1.8E-5 | 153 | 5.2 | 2.5E-4 | 1.3 | 0.9 | Funahashi et al. (2011) |
| 800 | Ca3Co3.8Ag0.2O9 | 1.1E-4 | 120 | 1.0 | 1.1E-01 | Ca0.98Sm0.02MnO3 | 1.4E-4 | 180 | 1.6 | 1.5E-4 | 1.7 | 0.9 | Han et al. (2011) |
| 400 | Nd0.995Ca0.005CoO3 | 4.5E-3 | 450 | 1.3 | 1.4E-02 | LaCo0.99Mn0.01O3 | 2.0E-3 | 100 | 1.5 | 3.3E-6 | 0.6 | 0.6 | Inagoya et al. (2011); Hashimoto, Kusunose, and Sekino (2009); Li and Li (2011) |
| 800 | Ca2.76Cu0.24Co4O9 | 3.3E-4 | 220 | 1.8 | 6.5E-02 | Ca0.8Dy0.2MnO3 | 9.5E-5 | 50 | 1.5 | 1.8E-5 | 1.0 | 0.7 | Park and Lee (2013); Wang et al. (2010); Nakamura and Uchida (1993) |
In a next step the ratio
With special emphasis on multilayer technologies the transversal device has the advantage of the application of metal and thermoelectric oxide layers only. No additional oxide layers are required in this case. Only two materials need to be implemented and the electrical contact behavior can be optimized for one oxide metal combination. Furthermore, the complete device volume can be used for the active material. No additional space is needed for insulators or air gaps which may increase the electrical power per unit area. The decoupling of thermal and electrical current flows gives additional degrees of freedom for the extraction of the electrical energy keeping a maximum temperature difference.
Experimental Analysis
In order to evaluate the concept of a thermoelectric transversal generator based on the oxide – metal combination a test vehicle was prepared with usual laboratory equipment. La1.97Sr0.03CuO4 (LSCO) was chosen as thermoelectric oxide because of good thermoelectric properties in the low temperature range (P. Tomeš et al. 2010; Nakamura and Uchida 1993). In addition, the usability in a ceramic multilayer process has already been demonstrated (Hayashi et al. 2010). LSCO polycrystalline samples were prepared using a common solid-state reaction method. The reactants La2O3, CuO and SrCO3 were mixed in the stoichiometric ratio and calcinated in air at 1073 K for 6 h. Then the powder was milled, pressed into disc-shape samples applying a pressure of 3 MPa followed by a sintering process at 1273 K for 2 h under air. The Seebeck-coefficient
A transverse thermoelectric device (TTD) was assembled simply by stacking 19 calcinated discs of LSCO with a thickness of 1.5 mm each using an intermediate commercial silver paste (Heraeus 2014). The layer stack tilt angle was

Transversal thermoelectric device prepared with La1.97Sr0.03CuO4 and silver.
The TTD characterization was carried out in a self-made measurement setup. The TTD was placed between two ceramic blocks with thermal grease. The upper block was heated and the lower ceramic block was only passively cooled by air. This setup does not allow the separate control of the average temperature and the temperature difference. The temperature gradient was directly measured on the upper and lower surface of the sample with two NiCr-Ni-thermocouples (Type-K). Electrical contacting was carried out by a usual four-point probe arrangement with two contacts on each side of the TTD. A four quadrant source-measure unit (Keithley 2400) was used to simulate a tunable load resistance for the TTD. Linear current–voltage (I–V) curves could be obtained indicating ohmic contact behavior of the device. Each I-V curve gives open source voltage Voc and short circuit current Isc for the actual average temperature
For comparison, stationary 2-dim FEM simulations of the TTD were performed with the software COMSOL Multiphysics 4.4 including the thermoelectric node. Mesh-dependent solution convergence was tested giving good results even for coarse meshes. Materials data measured versus temperature were used to derive analytical functions by regression analysis for LSCO parameters

2D simulation results for matched load (RTTD = RLoad) and ΔT = 37.4 K. (a) temperature distribution, (b) voltage distribution (color map) and current streamlines, (c) like (b) but with streamlines of useful current only.
Results and Discussion
Transport properties of the LSCO obtained in the temperature range between 300 K and 980 K are shown in Figure 5. The electrical resistivity of LSCO increases with increasing temperature reaching 0.2 mΩm at 980 K indicating a metal-like behavior. The Seebeck coefficient decreases from 230 µV/K to 105 µV/K in the corresponding temperature range. Furthermore, the thermal conductivity slowly decreases with temperatures from 3.0 Wm−1K−1 at 300 K to 2.1 Wm−1K−1 at 980 K. These results are within expectations considering data published on a thermoelectric oxide of similar composition La1.97Sr0.03CuO4 (Tomeš et al. 2010).

The transport properties Seebeck coefficient
The measurements of the TTD were made in the temperature range from 300 K up to 550 K. The temperature difference
A comprehensive overview of the measured and simulated data of the fabricated TTD is given in Figure 6. In all graphs three data sets are plotted: “theory” indicates the analytically calculated results based on equations from chapter (2) and the raw material data; “simulation” provides results of the FEM calculation, thus representing also calculated data. The measured device data are indicated by “experimental”. The measured open circuit voltage

Electrical characteristics vs temperature difference of the TTD: (a) open circuit voltage

Dimensionless figure of merit of the transversal thermoelectric device vs temperature.
It should be noted that the test device is not optimized for a number of parameters such as the tilt angle or the thickness of the individual layers. Furthermore, the temperature differences realized so far could be increased significantly by active cooling of the device on the low temperature side. In order to estimate the output power at a higher temperature difference the FEM simulation was performed for the low temperature of 350 K and the temperature difference 300 K. The optimization of the tilt angle
Summary and Conclusion
We have discussed device concepts of energy harvesters as dual leg, unileg and transversal thermoelectric devices based on an analytical approach for the figure of merit and on data published on oxide thermocouples. It has been shown that the mismatch of the oxide material properties reduces the figure of merit of the dual leg devices in many cases. Here, the unileg design including only one oxide and a metal may improve the expected performance. Furthermore, the unileg design was compared with a transversal setup resulting in an almost identical figure of merit for both types of devices. As a consequence it could be stated that the transversal thermoelectric device is always a simplified alternative if no pair of oxides with matching properties is available. Considering the potential application of a large-scale multilayer ceramic technology, it can further be concluded that the transversal device provides certain advantages compared to unileg devices. An oxide-metal transversal laboratory test device was built and characterized in detail to evaluate the potential of the oxide based transversal thermoelectric energy harvester. The results obtained allow the conclusion that transversal devices may deliver an electrical power density similar to recently published oxide dual leg devices. The generated power in particular will be sufficient to drive sensor or radio applications in the low power range. At the same time transversal devices should have significant advantages considering the conditions required for a large-scale production.
Funding statement: Funding: The work was financially supported within the project “THERMUMOX” by the Thuringian Ministry for Economy, Labour and Technology – European Social Fund Thuringia (2011FGR0132) and the project “NOXTHERMO” by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research Germany (03FH003I2).
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©2015 by De Gruyter
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Introduction to the Special Double Issue on Thermoelectrics
- Entropy Counts
- Thermoelectric Material Tensor Derived from the Onsager–de Groot–Callen Model
- Anisotropy Effects on the Thermoelectric Electronic Transport Coefficients
- Transversal Oxide-Metal Thermoelectric Device for Low-Power Energy Harvesting
- Energy Harvesting under Large Temperature Gradient – Comparison of Silicides, Half-Heusler Alloys and Ceramics
- Development of Inexpensive SiGe–FeSi2 Thermoelectric Nanocomposites
- Enhanced Thermoelectric Performance in PbTe–PbS Nanocomposites
- Thermal Conductivity of A-Site Cation-Deficient La-Substituted SrTiO3 Produced by Spark Plasma Sintering
- Role of Sintering Atmosphere and Synthesis Parameters on Electrical Conductivity of ZnO
- Thermoelectric Power Supply of Wireless Sensor Nodes in Marine Gearboxes
- Finite-Element Simulations of a Thermoelectric Generator and Their Experimental Validation
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Introduction to the Special Double Issue on Thermoelectrics
- Entropy Counts
- Thermoelectric Material Tensor Derived from the Onsager–de Groot–Callen Model
- Anisotropy Effects on the Thermoelectric Electronic Transport Coefficients
- Transversal Oxide-Metal Thermoelectric Device for Low-Power Energy Harvesting
- Energy Harvesting under Large Temperature Gradient – Comparison of Silicides, Half-Heusler Alloys and Ceramics
- Development of Inexpensive SiGe–FeSi2 Thermoelectric Nanocomposites
- Enhanced Thermoelectric Performance in PbTe–PbS Nanocomposites
- Thermal Conductivity of A-Site Cation-Deficient La-Substituted SrTiO3 Produced by Spark Plasma Sintering
- Role of Sintering Atmosphere and Synthesis Parameters on Electrical Conductivity of ZnO
- Thermoelectric Power Supply of Wireless Sensor Nodes in Marine Gearboxes
- Finite-Element Simulations of a Thermoelectric Generator and Their Experimental Validation