10/29/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/28/2025 22:14
In the thermoelectric effect, a temperature difference generates electricity. A well-known example is the Seebeck effect, where a voltage arises between the ends of a material held at different temperatures. In the Peltier effect, which is the complementary phenomenon, an electric current causes one end of the material to heat up while the other cools down.
- The phenomenon is particularly interesting in electronics, where components continuously produce waste heat. If this heat could be converted back into useful electricity while simultaneously controlling overheating, devices could become significantly more energy-efficient, explains Senior Lecturer Riku Tuovinen from the University of Jyväskylä.
A collaboration between researchers at the University of Jyväskylä and Wroclaw University of Science and Technology reveals how temperature differences and electric currents behave in nanoscale junctions formed by single molecules, when the electrons are not in equilibrium but oscillate back and forth in time. To describe this behavior, a new approach to time-dependent quantum transport theory was developed, allowing the study of nanoscale structures where simple models fail to capture the multifaceted quantum effects. The theory has already been implemented in the CHEERS computational software, enabling detailed simulations of nanoscale thermoelectric processes.
- Our theoretical results show that molecular junctions can exhibit ultrashort periods during which the efficiency of thermoelectric conversion surpasses the steady-state level, says Tuovinen. Such brief efficiency peaks demonstrate that a dynamical view of the thermoelectric effect is crucial for both understanding nanoscale processes and advancing future quantum and energy technologies, he continues.
The study shows that femtosecond time scale thermoelectric fluctuations in molecular junctions can open new opportunities for controlling energy flow in nanoscale components.
- This is particularly relevant for future technologies, for example in developing ultrafast bolometers used for qubit readout in quantum computers, adds Tuovinen.
The research highlights that understanding time-dependent quantum phenomena is essential for harnessing heat transfer in nanoscale systems.
The results were published in PRX Energy on 15.10.2025.
Article information:
Thermoelectric Energy Conversion in Molecular Junctions Out of Equilibrium. R. Tuovinen and Y. Pavlyukh, PRX Energy, 15.10.2025
Link to article: https://journals.aps.org/prxenergy/abstract/10.1103/rj3h-8z3g
Doi number: https://doi.org/10.1103/rj3h-8z3g
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