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Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide

Zinc oxide (ZnO) has being recognised as a potentially interesting thermoelectric material, allowing flexible tuning of the electrical properties by donor doping. This work focuses on the assessment of tantalum doping effects on the relevant structural, microstructural, optical and thermoelectric pr...

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Autores principales: Arias-Serrano, Blanca I., Xie, Wenjie, Aguirre, Myriam H., Tobaldi, David M., Sarabando, Artur R., Rasekh, Shahed, Mikhalev, Sergey M., Frade, Jorge R., Weidenkaff, Anke, Kovalevsky, Andrei V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6651819/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31248011
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12132057
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author Arias-Serrano, Blanca I.
Xie, Wenjie
Aguirre, Myriam H.
Tobaldi, David M.
Sarabando, Artur R.
Rasekh, Shahed
Mikhalev, Sergey M.
Frade, Jorge R.
Weidenkaff, Anke
Kovalevsky, Andrei V.
author_facet Arias-Serrano, Blanca I.
Xie, Wenjie
Aguirre, Myriam H.
Tobaldi, David M.
Sarabando, Artur R.
Rasekh, Shahed
Mikhalev, Sergey M.
Frade, Jorge R.
Weidenkaff, Anke
Kovalevsky, Andrei V.
author_sort Arias-Serrano, Blanca I.
collection PubMed
description Zinc oxide (ZnO) has being recognised as a potentially interesting thermoelectric material, allowing flexible tuning of the electrical properties by donor doping. This work focuses on the assessment of tantalum doping effects on the relevant structural, microstructural, optical and thermoelectric properties of ZnO. Processing of the samples with a nominal composition Zn(1−x)Ta(x)O by conventional solid-state route results in limited solubility of Ta in the wurtzite structure. Electronic doping is accompanied by the formation of other defects and dislocations as a compensation mechanism and simultaneous segregation of ZnTa(2)O(6) at the grain boundaries. Highly defective structure and partial blocking of the grain boundaries suppress the electrical transport, while the evolution of Seebeck coefficient and band gap suggest that the charge carrier concentration continuously increases from x = 0 to 0.008. Thermal conductivity is almost not affected by the tantalum content. The highest ZT~0.07 at 1175 K observed for Zn(0.998)Ta(0.002)O is mainly provided by high Seebeck coefficient (−464 μV/K) along with a moderate electrical conductivity of ~13 S/cm. The results suggest that tantalum may represent a suitable dopant for thermoelectric zinc oxide, but this requires the application of specific processing methods and compositional design to enhance the solubility of Ta in wurtzite lattice.
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spelling pubmed-66518192019-08-08 Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide Arias-Serrano, Blanca I. Xie, Wenjie Aguirre, Myriam H. Tobaldi, David M. Sarabando, Artur R. Rasekh, Shahed Mikhalev, Sergey M. Frade, Jorge R. Weidenkaff, Anke Kovalevsky, Andrei V. Materials (Basel) Article Zinc oxide (ZnO) has being recognised as a potentially interesting thermoelectric material, allowing flexible tuning of the electrical properties by donor doping. This work focuses on the assessment of tantalum doping effects on the relevant structural, microstructural, optical and thermoelectric properties of ZnO. Processing of the samples with a nominal composition Zn(1−x)Ta(x)O by conventional solid-state route results in limited solubility of Ta in the wurtzite structure. Electronic doping is accompanied by the formation of other defects and dislocations as a compensation mechanism and simultaneous segregation of ZnTa(2)O(6) at the grain boundaries. Highly defective structure and partial blocking of the grain boundaries suppress the electrical transport, while the evolution of Seebeck coefficient and band gap suggest that the charge carrier concentration continuously increases from x = 0 to 0.008. Thermal conductivity is almost not affected by the tantalum content. The highest ZT~0.07 at 1175 K observed for Zn(0.998)Ta(0.002)O is mainly provided by high Seebeck coefficient (−464 μV/K) along with a moderate electrical conductivity of ~13 S/cm. The results suggest that tantalum may represent a suitable dopant for thermoelectric zinc oxide, but this requires the application of specific processing methods and compositional design to enhance the solubility of Ta in wurtzite lattice. MDPI 2019-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6651819/ /pubmed/31248011 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12132057 Text en © 2019 by the authors. 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Arias-Serrano, Blanca I.
Xie, Wenjie
Aguirre, Myriam H.
Tobaldi, David M.
Sarabando, Artur R.
Rasekh, Shahed
Mikhalev, Sergey M.
Frade, Jorge R.
Weidenkaff, Anke
Kovalevsky, Andrei V.
Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide
title Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide
title_full Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide
title_fullStr Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide
title_short Exploring Tantalum as a Potential Dopant to Promote the Thermoelectric Performance of Zinc Oxide
title_sort exploring tantalum as a potential dopant to promote the thermoelectric performance of zinc oxide
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6651819/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31248011
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12132057
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