Published September 1, 2025 | Version v1
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Ion-Selective Transport in Surface-Modified Cellulose Membranes for Aqueous Ionic Thermoelectrics

Description

Abstract:

Efficient recovery of low-grade heat (≤100 °C) remains a significant challenge in sustainable energy conversion. Here, we report a strategy to enhance ionic thermoelectric performance in biocompatible regenerated cellulose (RC) membranes by tailoring their surface charge.Surface functionalisation was achieved using two oppositely charged organic moieties: 2,2,6,6tetramethylpiperidin-1-oxyl (TEMPO) to introduce carboxyl groups, and 3-chloro-2hydroxypropyltrimethylammonium chloride (CHMAC) to graft quaternary ammonium functionalities. This work presents the first direct, side-by-side comparison of oppositely charged surface functional groups, carboxyl (TEMPO) and quaternary ammonium (CHMAC), on ionic thermoelectric behaviour in cellulose membranes. These modifications significantly increased the fixed surface charge density, promoting ion selectivity and enabling efficient ion transport under a thermal gradient. CHMAC-functionalised RC membranes exhibited the highest performance, with a Seebeck coefficient of +6.1 mV K -1 in a stacked membrane configuration using 0.1 mM HCl electrolyte, representing a tenfold enhancement compared to unmodified RC membranes. Correspondingly, ionic conductivity increased by up to 950-fold, with a figure of merit (ZT) reaching 8.24 × 10 -4 . This study establishes a clear link between surface charge engineering and thermodiffusion-enhanced ionic transport in RC membranes, offering a scalable and sustainable route for harvesting low-grade thermal energy using green, aqueous systems.

 

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Notes

TRANSLATE is a €3.4 million EU-funded research project that aims to develop a new nanofluidic platform technology to effectively convert waste heat to electricity. This technology has the potential to improve the energy efficiency of many devices and systems, and provide a radically new zero-emission power source. The TRANSLATE project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 964251, for the action of 'The Recycling of waste heat through the Application of Nanofluidic ChannelS: Advances in the Conversion of Thermal to Electrical energy'. More information can be be found on the TRANSLATE project website: https://translate-energy.eu/

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
TRANSLATE - The Recycling of waste heat through the Application of Nanofluidic ChannelS: Advances in the Conversion of Thermal to Electrical energy 964251

Dates

Accepted
2025-09-01