and n-doped semiconductors), configured as a
thermoelectric generator. If the load resistor at the bottom is replaced with a
voltmeter, the circuit then functions as a temperature-sensing
thermocouple. The
Seebeck effect is the emergence of
electromotive force (EMF) that develops across two points of an electrically conducting material when there is a temperature difference between them. The EMF is called the Seebeck EMF (or thermo/thermal/thermoelectric EMF). The ratio between the EMF and temperature difference is the Seebeck coefficient. A
thermocouple measures the difference in potential across a hot and cold end for two dissimilar materials. This potential difference is proportional to the temperature difference between the hot and cold ends. First discovered in 1794 by
Alessandro Volta, it is named after
Thomas Johann Seebeck, who rediscovered it in 1821. Seebeck observed what he called "thermomagnetic effect" wherein a
magnetic compass needle would be deflected by a closed loop formed by two different metals joined in two places, with an applied temperature difference between the joints.
Hans Christian Ørsted noted that the temperature difference was in fact driving an electric current, with the
generation of magnetic field being an indirect consequence, and so coined the more accurate term "thermoelectricity". The Seebeck effect is a classic example of an
electromotive force (EMF) and leads to measurable currents or voltages in the same way as any other EMF. The local
current density is given by \mathbf J = \sigma (-\nabla V + \mathbf E_\text{EMF}), where V is the local
voltage, and \sigma is the local
conductivity. In general, the Seebeck effect is described locally by the creation of an electromotive field \mathbf E_\text{EMF} = -S \nabla T, where S is the
Seebeck coefficient (also known as thermopower), a property of the local material, and \nabla T is the temperature gradient. The Seebeck coefficients generally vary as function of temperature and depend strongly on the composition of the conductor. For ordinary materials at room temperature, the Seebeck coefficient may range in value from −100 μV/K to +1,000 μV/K (see
Seebeck coefficient article for more information).
Applications In practice, thermoelectric effects are essentially unobservable for a localized hot or cold spot in a single homogeneous conducting material, since the overall EMFs from the increasing and decreasing temperature gradients will perfectly cancel out. Attaching an electrode to the hotspot in an attempt to measure the locally shifted voltage will only partly succeed: It means another temperature gradient will appear inside of the electrode, so the overall EMF will depend on the difference in Seebeck coefficients between the electrode and the conductor it is attached to.
Thermocouples involve two wires, each of a different material, that are electrically joined in a region of unknown temperature. The loose ends are measured in an open-circuit state (without any current, \mathbf J = 0). Although the materials' Seebeck coefficients S are nonlinearly temperature dependent and different for the two materials, the open-circuit condition means that \nabla V = -S \nabla T everywhere. Therefore (see the
thermocouple article for more details) the voltage measured at the loose ends of the wires is directly dependent on the unknown temperature, and yet totally independent of other details such as the exact geometry of the wires. This direct relationship allows the thermocouple arrangement to be used as a straightforward uncalibrated thermometer, provided knowledge of the difference in S-vs-T curves of the two materials, and of the reference temperature at the measured loose wire ends.
Thermoelectric sorting functions similarly to a thermocouple but involves an unknown material instead of an unknown temperature: a metallic probe of known composition is kept at a constant known temperature and held in contact with the unknown sample that is locally heated to the probe temperature, thereby providing an approximate measurement of the unknown Seebeck coefficient S. This can help distinguish between different metals and alloys.
Thermopiles are formed from many thermocouples in series, zig-zagging back and forth between hot and cold. This multiplies the voltage output.
Thermoelectric generators are like a thermocouple/thermopile but instead draw some current from the generated voltage in order to extract power from heat differentials. They are optimized differently from thermocouples, using high quality
thermoelectric materials in a thermopile arrangement, to maximize the extracted power. Though not particularly efficient, these generators have the advantage of not having any moving parts. == Peltier effect ==