(Press-News.org) Groundbreaking cerium oxide-based thermal switches achieve remarkable performance, transforming heat flow control with sustainable and efficient technology.
Thermal switches, which electrically control heat transfer, are essential for the advancement of sophisticated thermal management systems. Historically, electrochemical thermal switches have been constrained by suboptimal performance, which impedes their extensive utilization in the electronics, energy, and waste heat recovery sectors.
A research team led by Professor Hiromichi Ohta of the Research Institute for Electronic Science, Hokkaido University employed a novel approach of using cerium oxide (CeO2) thin films as the active material in thermal switches, providing a highly efficient and sustainable alternative. Their findings have been published in Science Advances.
The research team showed that CeO2-based thermal switch performance can exceed prior benchmarks. “The novel device features an on/off thermal conductivity ratio of 5.8 and a thermal conductivity (κ)-switching width of 10.3 W/m·K, establishing a new benchmark for electrochemical thermal switches,” Ohta explains. “The thermal conductivity in its minimal state (off-state) is 2.2 W/m·K, but in the oxidized state (on-state), it significantly rises to 12.5 W/m·K. These performance metrics remain consistent after 100 cycles of reduction and oxidation, demonstrating remarkable durability and reliability for extended usage in practical applications.”
A notable benefit of this technology is the utilization of cerium oxide, a substance abundant in the earth, recognized for its economic viability and ecological sustainability. In contrast to conventional thermal switches that depend on scarce and costly materials, CeO2 offers a sustainable and readily available alternative, reducing expenses and the ecological footprint of thermal management solutions. This enhances the technology's efficiency, scalability, and applicability across diverse industrial sectors.
The development of CeO2-based thermal switches represents a significant breakthrough in thermal management technology, offering broad applications across industries such as electronics cooling and renewable energy systems. These switches, utilized in thermal shutters and advanced displays, efficiently regulate infrared heat transfer, enhance waste heat recovery, and contribute to energy-efficient systems.
END
Revolutionizing heat management with high-performance cerium oxide thermal switches
2025-01-01
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
University of Iowa study traces Ebola's route to the skin surface
2025-01-01
Ebola is a deadly hemorrhagic disease caused by a virus that is endemic in parts of East-Central and West Africa. Most people are aware that a primary route for person-to-person transmission is through contact with bodily fluids from an infected person. But more recent outbreaks, including the 2013-2016 Ebola epidemic in West Africa, demonstrated that infectious Ebola virus (EBOV) is also found on the skin’s surface of those who have succumbed to infection or at late times during infection. Although evidence suggests that EBOV can be passed on from skin contact with a person in the later stages of the disease, very little is known about how the virus makes its way out ...
Study finds smoking linked to increased risk of chronic kidney disease in later stages
2025-01-01
A recent study published in Health Data Science led by Zhilong Zhang from the Institute of Medical Technology at Peking University Health Science Center and Professor Luxia Zhang from the National Institute of Health Data Science at Peking University has shed light on the complex relationship between smoking behavior and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Using data from over 500,000 participants in the UK Biobank cohort, the researchers conducted both traditional observational studies and advanced Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses to explore whether smoking behavior ...
System to auto-detect new variants will inform better response to future infectious disease outbreaks
2025-01-01
Researchers have come up with a new way to identify more infectious variants of viruses or bacteria that start spreading in humans - including those causing flu, COVID, whooping cough and tuberculosis.
The new approach uses samples from infected humans to allow real-time monitoring of pathogens circulating in human populations, and enable vaccine-evading bugs to be quickly and automatically identified. This could inform the development of vaccines that are more effective in preventing disease.
The approach can also quickly detect ...
Key players in brain aging: New research identifies age-related damage on a cellular level
2025-01-01
SEATTLE, WASH.—January 1, 2025—Scientists at the Allen Institute have identified specific cell types in the brain of mice that undergo major changes as they age, along with a specific hot spot where many of those changes occur. The discoveries, published in the journal Nature, could pave the way for future therapies to slow or manage the aging process in the brain.
Key findings
Sensitive cells: Scientists discovered dozens of specific cell types, mostly glial cells, known as brain support cells, that underwent significant gene expression changes with age. Those strongly affected included microglia and border-associated ...
Pupil size in sleep reveals how memories are sorted, preserved
2025-01-01
ITHACA, N.Y. – Cornell University researchers have found the pupil is key to understanding how, and when, the brain forms strong, long-lasting memories.
By studying mice equipped with brain electrodes and tiny eye-tracking cameras, the researchers determined that new memories are being replayed and consolidated when the pupil is contracted during a substage of non-REM sleep. When the pupil is dilated, the process repeats for older memories. The brain’s ability to separate these two substages of sleep with a previously unknown micro-structure is what ...
Revealing a key mechanism of rapid centromere evolution
2025-01-01
A joint research group team led by Sayuri Tsukahara and Tetsuji Kakutani of the University of Tokyo has clarified a mechanism of how retrotransposons, genetic elements that can “jump around” chromosomes and are known drivers of evolution, preferentially insert in the centromere. The findings were published in the journal Nature.
The centromere is the thinnest part of the chromosome that divides it into a long and short arm, much like how the waist separates the upper and lower body. Its role in transmitting information via cell division has been preserved ...
A tour de force: Columbia engineers discover new “all-optical” nanoscale sensors of force
2025-01-01
New York, NY—January 1, 2025—Mechanical force is an essential feature for many physical and biological processes. Remote measurement of mechanical signals with high sensitivity and spatial resolution is needed for a wide range of applications, from robotics to cellular biophysics and medicine and even to space travel. Nanoscale luminescent force sensors excel at measuring piconewton forces, while larger sensors have proven powerful in probing micronewton forces. However, large gaps remain in the force magnitudes that can be probed remotely from subsurface ...
Ancient DNA unlocks new understanding of migrations in the first millennium AD
2025-01-01
Francis Crick Institute press release
Under strict embargo: 16:00 GMT Wednesday 1 January 2025
Peer reviewed
Observational study
Ancient people
Ancient DNA unlocks new understanding of migrations in the first millennium AD
Waves of human migration across Europe during the first millennium AD have been revealed using a more precise method of analysing ancestry with ancient DNA, in research led by the Francis Crick Institute.
Researchers can bring together a picture of how people moved across the world by looking at changes in their DNA, but this becomes a lot harder when historical ...
MIT scientists pin down the origins of a fast radio burst
2025-01-01
Fast radio bursts are brief and brilliant explosions of radio waves emitted by extremely compact objects such as neutron stars and possibly black holes. These fleeting fireworks last for just a thousandth of a second and can carry an enormous amount of energy — enough to briefly outshine entire galaxies.
Since the first fast radio burst (FRB) was discovered in 2007, astronomers have detected thousands of FRBs, whose locations range from within our own galaxy to as far as 8 billion light-years away. Exactly how ...
Researchers reveal why the lung is a frequent site of cancer metastasis
2025-01-01
Leuven, 2 January 2024 – Researchers from the lab of Prof. Sarah-Maria Fendt (VIB-KU Leuven) and colleagues have uncovered that the availability of the amino acid aspartate is one reason why the lung is a frequent organ of metastasis. Their work appears in Nature and improves our understanding of cancer biology while providing the foundation for new therapeutic interventions in metastatic diseases.
A role for aspartate
More than half of cancer patients in whom the cancer spreads beyond the primary site have lung metastases. What makes the lungs such a ...