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Pressure-induced enhancement of thermoelectric power factor in pristine and hole-doped SnSe crystals

We evaluate the influence of pressure on the thermoelectric power factors PF ≡ S(2)σ of pristine and Na-doped SnSe crystals by measuring their electrical conductivity σ(T) and Seebeck coefficient S(T) up to ∼22 kbar with a self-clamped piston-cylinder cell. For both cases, σ(T) is enhanced while S(T...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Su, Na, Qin, B. C., Zhu, K. J., Liu, Z. Y., Shahi, P., Sun, J. P., Wang, B. S., Sui, Y., Shi, Y. G., Zhao, L. D., Cheng, J.-G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9070544/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35528554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra05134a
Descripción
Sumario:We evaluate the influence of pressure on the thermoelectric power factors PF ≡ S(2)σ of pristine and Na-doped SnSe crystals by measuring their electrical conductivity σ(T) and Seebeck coefficient S(T) up to ∼22 kbar with a self-clamped piston-cylinder cell. For both cases, σ(T) is enhanced while S(T) reduced with increasing pressure as expected, but their imbalanced variations lead to a monotonic enhancement of PF under pressure. For pristine SnSe, σ(290 K) increases by ∼4 times from ∼10.1 to 38 S cm(−1), while S(290 K) decreases by only ∼12% from 474 to 415 μV K(−1), leading to about three-fold enhancement of PF from 2.24 to 6.61 μW cm(−1) K(−2), which is very close to the optimal value of SnSe above the structural transition at ∼800 K at ambient pressure. In comparison, the PF of Na-doped SnSe at 290 K is enhanced moderately by ∼30% up to 20 kbar. In contrast, the PF of isostructural black phosphorus with a simple band structure was found to decrease under pressure. The comparison with black phosphorus indicates that the multi-valley valence band structure of SnSe is beneficial for the enhancement of PF by retaining a large Seebeck coefficient under pressure. Our results also provide experimental confirmation on the previous theoretical prediction that high pressure can be used to optimize the thermoelectric efficiency of SnSe.