| Literature DB >> 28584242 |
Jason D Forster1, Jared J Lynch2, Nelson E Coates3, Jun Liu4, Hyejin Jang5, Edmond Zaia1,6, Madeleine P Gordon1, Maxime Szybowski7, Ayaskanta Sahu1, David G Cahill5, Jeffrey J Urban8.
Abstract
Thermoelectric power generation can play a key role in a sustainable energy future by converting waste heat from power plants and other industrial processes into usable electrical power. Current thermoelectric devices, however, require energy intensive manufacturing processes such as alloying and spark plasma sintering. Here, we describe the fabrication of a p-type thermoelectric material, copper selenide (Cu2Se), utilizing solution-processing and thermal annealing to produce a thin film that achieves a figure of merit, ZT, which is as high as its traditionally processed counterpart, a value of 0.14 at room temperature. This is the first report of a fully solution-processed nanomaterial achieving performance equivalent to its bulk form and represents a general strategy to reduce the energy required to manufacture advanced energy conversion and harvesting materials.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28584242 PMCID: PMC5459815 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02944-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Nanocrystal structural characterization. (a) XRD spectra for drop-cast and annealed films of Cu2Se. In this plot, q is in units of 2π/d. The reference peaks are calculated from the room temperature structure determined by Gulay et al.[37]. (b–h) Top-view SEM images of thin films that were annealed at the same temperature as the drop-cast samples used for XRD spectra in (a). In panel (h), “NA” stands for “not annealed”. Each image is 170 nm across. (i) Low resolution TEM image of Cu2Se nanocrystals. (j) High resolution TEM image of a Cu2Se nanocrystal.
Figure 2Thin Film Morphology. (a) Top-view SEM image of an as-cast thin film of Cu2Se nanoparticles. (b) Cross-section SEM image of the film shown in (a). The film is 75 nm thick. (c) Top-view SEM image of a Cu2Se thin film after annealing at 400 °C for 45 minutes in an N2 atmosphere. Prior to annealing, this film was prepared the same way as the film in (a). (d) Cross-section SEM image of the film shown in (c). The film is 54 nm thick. The scale bars in all images are 100 nm wide. The full sets of top-view and cross-section SEM images are shown in Supplementary Figures 2 and 3.
Figure 3Thermoelectric Performance as a Function of Annealing Temperature. (a–d) Room temperature values for Seebeck coefficient, in-plane electrical conductivity, cross-plane thermal conductivity, and ZT, respectively, plotted as functions of annealing temperature (“NA” stands for “not annealed”). The gray symbols in panel (c) are estimates of the lattice thermal conductivity, which are computed using the Wiedemann-Franz Law, κ = κ − σ LT, where κ = κ + κ is the total thermal conductivity measured by TDTR, σ is the electrical conductivity of the film, L = 2.44 × 10−8 W Ω K −2 is the Lorenz number in the degenerate limit, and T is room temperature in Kelvins. The data in this figure are from samples derived from the same synthetic batch. We report the results, except for thermal conductivity, for a second batch of nanocrystals in Supplementary Figure 12.