The development of wearable and diffuse electronics has prompted a global need for converting heat into electrical power. This could be heat from reactors, the sun, or even the human body. Thermoelectric materials are ideal candidates, since they contain no moving parts, can be fabricated as thin films and are scalable. However, they currently see only niche application, owing to their very low efficiency. Bulk materials offer little room for progress: the ingredients to reach high efficiencies are mutually contradictory in the bulk. In contrast, theory clearly indicates that molecular nano-materials do not suffer from such constraints and may provide a solution.
TherSpinMol aimed at developing the first molecular thermoelectric devices and discovering new strategies to improve their efficiency. Furthermore, the project worked towards establishing the experimental foundations for molecular spin-caloritronics.
The project has fundamental and applicative significance, aiming at exploring both the physics background of thermoelectric power generation on the single-molecular level and novel ways to create pure spin-currents and their perspective applicability for the reduction of energy consumption in logic elements and energy harvesting.