| Literature DB >> 31604269 |
Wenke He1, Dongyang Wang1, Haijun Wu2, Yu Xiao1, Yang Zhang2, Dongsheng He3, Yue Feng3, Yu-Jie Hao3, Jin-Feng Dong4, Raju Chetty5, Lijie Hao6, Dongfeng Chen6, Jianfei Qin6, Qiang Yang7, Xin Li9, Jian-Ming Song7, Yingcai Zhu8, Wei Xu8, Changlei Niu9, Xin Li9, Guangtao Wang10, Chang Liu3,11, Michihiro Ohta5, Stephen J Pennycook2, Jiaqing He3, Jing-Feng Li4, Li-Dong Zhao12.
Abstract
Thermoelectric technology allows conversion between heat and electricity. Many good thermoelectric materials contain rare or toxic elements, so developing low-cost and high-performance thermoelectric materials is warranted. Here, we report the temperature-dependent interplay of three separate electronic bands in hole-doped tin sulfide (SnS) crystals. This behavior leads to synergistic optimization between effective mass (m*) and carrier mobility (μ) and can be boosted through introducing selenium (Se). This enhanced the power factor from ~30 to ~53 microwatts per centimeter per square kelvin (μW cm-1 K-2 at 300 K), while lowering the thermal conductivity after Se alloying. As a result, we obtained a maximum figure of merit ZT (ZT max) of ~1.6 at 873 K and an average ZT (ZT ave) of ~1.25 at 300 to 873 K in SnS0.91Se0.09 crystals. Our strategy for band manipulation offers a different route for optimizing thermoelectric performance. The high-performance SnS crystals represent an important step toward low-cost, Earth-abundant, and environmentally friendly thermoelectrics.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31604269 DOI: 10.1126/science.aax5123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728