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Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation

Metal chalcogenides are primarily used for thermoelectric applications due to their enormous potential to convert waste heat into valuable energy. Several studies focused on single or dual aliovalent doping techniques to enhance thermoelectric properties in semiconductor materials; however, these do...

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Autores principales: Musah, Jamal-Deen, Or, Siu Wing, Kong, Lingyan, Roy, Vellaisamy A. L., Wu, Chi-Man Lawrence
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10608984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37887892
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano13202738
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author Musah, Jamal-Deen
Or, Siu Wing
Kong, Lingyan
Roy, Vellaisamy A. L.
Wu, Chi-Man Lawrence
author_facet Musah, Jamal-Deen
Or, Siu Wing
Kong, Lingyan
Roy, Vellaisamy A. L.
Wu, Chi-Man Lawrence
author_sort Musah, Jamal-Deen
collection PubMed
description Metal chalcogenides are primarily used for thermoelectric applications due to their enormous potential to convert waste heat into valuable energy. Several studies focused on single or dual aliovalent doping techniques to enhance thermoelectric properties in semiconductor materials; however, these dopants enhance one property while deteriorating others due to the interdependency of these properties or may render the host material toxic. Therefore, a strategic doping approach is vital to harness the full potential of doping to improve the efficiency of thermoelectric generation while restoring the base material eco-friendly. Here, we report a well-designed counter-doped eco-friendly nanomaterial system (~70 nm) using both isovalent (cerium) and aliovalent (cobalt) in a Bi(2)Se(3) system for enhancing energy conversion efficiency. Substituting cerium for bismuth simultaneously enhances the Seebeck coefficient and electrical conductivity via ionized impurity minimization. The boost in the average electronegativity offered by the self-doped transitional metal cobalt leads to an improvement in the degree of delocalization of the valence electrons. Hence, the new energy state around the Fermi energy serving as electron feed to the conduction band coherently improves the density of the state of conducting electrons. The resulting high power factor and low thermal conductivity contributed to the remarkable improvement in the figure of merit (zT = 0.55) at 473 K for an optimized doping concentration of 0.01 at. %. sample, and a significant nanoparticle size reduction from 400 nm to ~70 nm, making the highly performing materials in this study ([Formula: see text]) an excellent thermoelectric generator. The results presented here are higher than several Bi(2)Se(3)-based materials already reported.
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spelling pubmed-106089842023-10-28 Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation Musah, Jamal-Deen Or, Siu Wing Kong, Lingyan Roy, Vellaisamy A. L. Wu, Chi-Man Lawrence Nanomaterials (Basel) Article Metal chalcogenides are primarily used for thermoelectric applications due to their enormous potential to convert waste heat into valuable energy. Several studies focused on single or dual aliovalent doping techniques to enhance thermoelectric properties in semiconductor materials; however, these dopants enhance one property while deteriorating others due to the interdependency of these properties or may render the host material toxic. Therefore, a strategic doping approach is vital to harness the full potential of doping to improve the efficiency of thermoelectric generation while restoring the base material eco-friendly. Here, we report a well-designed counter-doped eco-friendly nanomaterial system (~70 nm) using both isovalent (cerium) and aliovalent (cobalt) in a Bi(2)Se(3) system for enhancing energy conversion efficiency. Substituting cerium for bismuth simultaneously enhances the Seebeck coefficient and electrical conductivity via ionized impurity minimization. The boost in the average electronegativity offered by the self-doped transitional metal cobalt leads to an improvement in the degree of delocalization of the valence electrons. Hence, the new energy state around the Fermi energy serving as electron feed to the conduction band coherently improves the density of the state of conducting electrons. The resulting high power factor and low thermal conductivity contributed to the remarkable improvement in the figure of merit (zT = 0.55) at 473 K for an optimized doping concentration of 0.01 at. %. sample, and a significant nanoparticle size reduction from 400 nm to ~70 nm, making the highly performing materials in this study ([Formula: see text]) an excellent thermoelectric generator. The results presented here are higher than several Bi(2)Se(3)-based materials already reported. MDPI 2023-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10608984/ /pubmed/37887892 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano13202738 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Musah, Jamal-Deen
Or, Siu Wing
Kong, Lingyan
Roy, Vellaisamy A. L.
Wu, Chi-Man Lawrence
Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation
title Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation
title_full Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation
title_fullStr Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation
title_full_unstemmed Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation
title_short Eco-Friendly Cerium–Cobalt Counter-Doped Bi(2)Se(3) Nanoparticulate Semiconductor: Synergistic Doping Effect for Enhanced Thermoelectric Generation
title_sort eco-friendly cerium–cobalt counter-doped bi(2)se(3) nanoparticulate semiconductor: synergistic doping effect for enhanced thermoelectric generation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10608984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37887892
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano13202738
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