Enhanced Thermoelectric Properties in Bulk Nanowire
Heterostructure-Based Nanocomposites through Minority Carrier Blocking
Posted on 2015-02-11 - 00:00
To design superior thermoelectric
materials the minority carrier
blocking effect in which the unwanted bipolar transport is prevented
by the interfacial energy barriers in the heterogeneous nanostructures
has been theoretically proposed recently. The theory predicts an enhanced
power factor and a reduced bipolar thermal conductivity for materials
with a relatively low doping level, which could lead to an improvement
in the thermoelectric figure of merit (ZT). Here we show the first
experimental demonstration of the minority carrier blocking in lead
telluride–silver telluride (PbTe–Ag2Te) nanowire
heterostructure-based nanocomposites. The nanocomposites are made
by sintering PbTe–Ag2Te nanowire heterostructures
produced in a highly scalable solution-phase synthesis. Compared with
Ag2Te nanowire-based nanocomposite produced in similar
method, the PbTe–Ag2Te nanocomposite containing
∼5 atomic % PbTe exhibits enhanced Seebeck coefficient, reduced
thermal conductivity, and ∼40% improved ZT, which can be well
explained by the theoretical modeling based on the Boltzmann transport
equations when energy barriers for both electrons and holes at the
heterostructure interfaces are considered in the calculations. For
this p-type PbTe–Ag2Te nanocomposite, the barriers
for electrons, that is, minority carriers, are primarily responsible
for the ZT enhancement. By extending this approach to other nanostructured
systems, it represents a key step toward low-cost solution-processable
nanomaterials without heavy doping level for high-performance thermoelectric
energy harvesting.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Yang, Haoran; Bahk, Je-Hyeong; Day, Tristan; Mohammed, Amr M.
S.; Snyder, G. Jeffrey; Shakouri, Ali; et al. (2016). Enhanced Thermoelectric Properties in Bulk Nanowire
Heterostructure-Based Nanocomposites through Minority Carrier Blocking. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/nl504624r