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Coroa, J., B. M. Morais Faustino, A. C. Marques, C. Bianchi, T. Koskinen, T. Juntunen, I. Tittonen, and I. Ferreira, "Highly transparent copper iodide thin film thermoelectric generator on a flexible substrate", RSC Advances, vol. 9, pp. 35384, 2019.
João, C. F. C., A. C. Baptista, I. M. M. Ferreira, J. C. Silva, and J. P. Borges, "https://vtt.pure.elsevier.com/en/publications/transflexteg-large-area-transparent-thin-film-thermoelectric-devi", Fibrous and textile materials for composite applications, Singapore, Springer, pp. 261-299, 2016. Abstract

Cellulose and chitin are the two most abundant natural polysaccharides. Both have a semicrystalline microfibrillar structure from which nanofibres can be extracted. These nanofibres are rod-like microcrystals that can be used as nanoscale reinforcements in composites due to their outstanding mechanical properties. This chapter starts by reviewing the sources, extraction methods and properties of cellulose and chitin nanofibres. Then, their use in the fabrication of structural and functional nanocomposites and the applications that have been investigated are reviewed. Nanocomposites are materials with internal nano-sized structures. They benefit from the properties of the nanofillers: low density, nonabrasive, nontoxic, low cost, susceptibility to chemical modifications and biodegradability. Diverse manufacturing technologies have been used to produce films, fibres, foams, sponges, aerogels, etc. Given their natural origin and high stiffness, these polymers have attracted a lot of attention not only in the biomedical and tissue engineering fields but also in areas such as pharmaceutics, cosmetics, agriculture, biosensors and water treatment.

Loureiro, J., T. Mateus, S. Filonovich, M. Ferreira, J. Figueira, A. Rodrigues, B. F. Donovan, P. E. Hopkins, and I. Ferreira, "Hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon thin films with promising thermoelectric properties", Appl. Phys. A, vol. 120, issue 4, pp. 1497–1502, 2015. AbstractDOI

The search for materials with suitable thermoelectric properties that are environmentally friendly and abundant led us to investigate p- and n-type hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si:H) thin films, produced by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition. The Seebeck coefficient and power factor were measured at room temperature showing optimized values of 512 µV K−1 and 3.6 × 10−5 W m−1 K−2, for p-type, and −188 µV K−1 and 2.2 × 10−4 W m−1 K−2, for n-type thin films. The thermoelectric output power of one nc-Si:H pair of both n- and p-type materials is ~91 µW per material cm3, for a thermal gradient of 8 K. The output voltage and current values show a linear dependence with the number of pairs interconnected in series and/or parallel and show good integration performance.