It has been a difficulty to form well-distributed nano- and mesosized inclusions in a Bi2Te3-based matrix and thereby realizing no degradation of carrier mobility at interfaces between matrix and inclusions… Click to show full abstract
It has been a difficulty to form well-distributed nano- and mesosized inclusions in a Bi2Te3-based matrix and thereby realizing no degradation of carrier mobility at interfaces between matrix and inclusions for high thermoelectric performances. Herein, we successfully synthesize multistructured thermoelectric Bi0.4Sb1.6Te3 materials with Fe-rich nanoprecipitates and sub-micron FeTe2 inclusions by a conventional solid-state reaction followed by melt-spinning and spark plasma sintering that could be a facile preparation method for scale-up production. This study presents a bismuth antimony telluride based thermoelectric material with a multiscale structure whose lattice thermal conductivity is drastically reduced with minimal degradation on its carrier mobility. This is possible because a carefully chosen FeTe2 incorporated in the matrix allows its interfacial valence band with the matrix to be aligned, leading to a significantly improved p-type thermoelectric power factor. Consequently, an impressively high thermoelectric figure of merit ZT of 1.52 is achieved at 396 K for p-type Bi0.4Sb1.6Te3-8 mol % FeTe2, which is a 43% enhancement in ZT compared to the pristine Bi0.4Sb1.6Te3. This work demonstrates not only the effectiveness of multiscale structuring for lowering lattice thermal conductivities, but also the importance of interfacial band alignment between matrix and inclusions for maintaining high carrier mobilities when designing high-performance thermoelectric materials.
               
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