| Literature DB >> 31498635 |
Yota Ichinose1, Akari Yoshida1, Kanako Horiuchi1, Kengo Fukuhara1, Natsumi Komatsu2, Weilu Gao2, Yohei Yomogida1, Manaho Matsubara3, Takahiro Yamamoto3, Junichiro Kono2,4,5, Kazuhiro Yanagi1.
Abstract
Semiconductors are generally considered far superior to metals as thermoelectric materials because of their much larger Seebeck coefficients (S). However, a maximum value of S in a semiconductor is normally accompanied by a minuscule electrical conductivity (σ), and hence, the thermoelectric power factor (P = S2σ) remains small. An attempt to increase σ by increasing the Fermi energy (EF), on the other hand, decreases S. This trade-off between S and σ is a well-known dilemma in developing high-performance thermoelectric devices based on semiconductors. Here, we show that the use of metallic carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with tunable EF solves this long-standing problem, demonstrating a higher thermoelectric performance than semiconducting CNTs. We studied the EF dependence of S, σ, and P in a series of CNT films with systematically varied metallic CNT contents. In purely metallic CNT films, both S and σ monotonically increased with EF, continuously boosting P while increasing EF. Particularly, in an aligned metallic CNT film, the maximum of P was ∼5 times larger than that in the highest-purity (>99%) single-chirality semiconducting CNT film. We attribute these superior thermoelectric properties of metallic CNTs to the simultaneously enhanced S and σ of one-dimensional conduction electrons near the first van Hove singularity.Entities:
Keywords: electrical double-layer technique; ionic liquid; nanomaterials; one dimension; single-wall carbon nanotubes; thermoelectric
Year: 2019 PMID: 31498635 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b03022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189