AI Article Synopsis

  • Fumaroles emit steam and volcanic gases at high temperatures (70-100°C), showcasing volcanic activity.
  • The paper discusses using thermoelectric generators to convert fumarole heat into electricity through the Seebeck effect, employing bismuth-telluride modules at Teide volcano.
  • The generator produced a net output of 0.32 to 0.33 W per module, which could power autonomous volcanic monitoring stations, but corrosion prevention measures are necessary due to harmful gases.

Article Abstract

Fumaroles represent evidence of volcanic activity, emitting steam and volcanic gases at temperatures between 70 and 100 ∘ C . Due to the well-known advantages of thermoelectricity, such as reliability, reduced maintenance and scalability, the present paper studies the possibilities of thermoelectric generators, devices based on solid-state physics, to directly convert fumaroles heat into electricity due to the Seebeck effect. For this purpose, a thermoelectric generator composed of two bismuth-telluride thermoelectric modules and heat pipes as heat exchangers was installed, for the first time, at Teide volcano (Canary Islands, Spain), where fumaroles arise in the surface at 82 ∘ C . The installed thermoelectric generator has demonstrated the feasibility of the proposed solution, leading to a compact generator with no moving parts that produces a net generation between 0.32 and 0 . 33 W per module given a temperature difference between the heat reservoirs encompassed in the 69- 86 ∘ C range. These results become interesting due to the possibilities of supplying power to the volcanic monitoring stations that measure the precursors of volcanic eruptions, making them completely autonomous. Nonetheless, in order to achieve this objective, corrosion prevention measures must be taken because the hydrogen sulfide contained in the fumaroles reacts with steam, forming sulfuric acid.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7349418PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20123547DOI Listing

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