Shifting up the optimum figure of merit of p-type bismuth telluride-based thermoelectric materials for power generation by suppressing intrinsic conduction

The abundance of low-temperature waste heat produced by industry and automobile exhaust necessitates the development of power generation with thermoelectric (TE) materials. Commercially available bismuth telluride-based alloys are generally used near room temperature. Materials that are composed of...

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Published inNPG Asia materials Vol. 6; no. 2; p. e88
Main Authors Hu, Li-Peng, Zhu, Tie-Jun, Wang, Ya-Guang, Xie, Han-Hui, Xu, Zhao-Jun, Zhao, Xin-Bing
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.02.2014
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:The abundance of low-temperature waste heat produced by industry and automobile exhaust necessitates the development of power generation with thermoelectric (TE) materials. Commercially available bismuth telluride-based alloys are generally used near room temperature. Materials that are composed of p -type bismuth telluride, which are suitable for low-temperature power generation (near 380 K), were successfully obtained through Sb-alloying, which suppresses detrimental intrinsic conduction at elevated temperatures by increasing hole concentrations and material band gaps. Furthermore, hot deformation (HD)-induced multi-scale microstructures were successfully realized in the high-performance p -type TE materials. Enhanced textures and donor-like effects all contributed to improved electrical transport properties. Multiple phonon scattering centers, including local nanostructures induced by dynamic recrystallization and high-density lattice defects, significantly reduced the lattice thermal conductivity. These combined effects resulted in observable improvement of ZT over the entire temperature range, with all TE parameters measured along the in-plane direction. The maximum ZT of 1.3 for the hot-deformed Bi 0.3 Sb 1.7 Te 3 alloy was reached at 380 K, whereas the average ZT av of 1.18 was found in the range of 300–480 K, indicating potential for application in low-temperature TE power generation. Energy conversion: Under the influence of antimony Thermoelectric materials, which convert temperature differences and electric voltage into each other, serve in refrigeration or power generation applications. Currently, bismuth telluride (Bi 2 Te 3 ) and its alloys are the most widely used thermoelectric materials. Tie-Jun Zhu, Xin-Bing Zhao and co-workers from Zhejiang University, China, have now investigated the effect of antimony (Sb) alloying on bismuth tellurides through a series of polycrystalline solid solutions of Bi 2- x Sb x Te3—where x varies between 1.4 and 1.8—prepared by hot deformation. Systematic tuning of the alloy composition showed that higher antimony content raised the material's optimal conversion temperature by repressing undesirable conduction. This effect arises from an increase in both the hole concentration and the band gap in the material. For a composition where x is 1.7, the alloy showed optimal performances at 380 kelvin—a suitable temperature for low-temperature power generation from the waste heat generated by industry or vehicles. The p -type bismuth telluride-based polycrystalline materials suiting for low-temperature power generations (near 380 K) have been obtained through Sb-alloying and HD, which suppresses the detrimental effect of intrinsic conduction at elevated temperature via increasing the hole concentration and band gap. The hot-deformed Bi 0.3 Sb 1.7 Te 3 alloy, not usual composition Bi 0.5 Sb 1.5 Te 3 , shows a maximum ZT of 1.3 at 380 K, indicating a bright application potential in low-temperature power generations.
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ISSN:1884-4049
1884-4057
1884-4057
DOI:10.1038/am.2013.86