After 140 Years: Seebeck Makes Good

The oldest direct conversion heat engine is the thermocouple. Take two different materials (typically, two dissimilar metal wires), join them, and heat the junction. A voltage, or electromotive force, can be measured across the unheated terminals. T. J. Seebeck first noticed this effect in 1821 in his laboratory in Berlin, but, because of a mistaken interpretation of what was involved, he did not seek any practical application for it. Only recently has any real progress been made in using his discovery for power production. To use the analogy of A. F. Joffe, the Russian pioneer in this field, thermoelectricity lay undisturbed for over a hundred years like Sleeping Beauty. The Prince that awoke her was the semiconductor.

As long as inefficient metal wires were used, textbook writers were correct in asserting that thermoelectricity could never be used for power production. The secret of practical thermoelectricity is therefore the creation of better thermoelectric materials. (Creation is the right word since the best materials for the purpose do not exist in nature.) To perform this alchemy, we first have to understand the Seebeck effect.