Thermoelectric Properties of Highly-Crystallized Ge-Te-Se Glasses Doped with Cu/Bi

Srinivasan, Bhuvanesh ; Boussard-Pledel, Catherine ; Dorcet, Vincent ; Samanta, Manisha ; Biswas, Kanishka ; Lefèvre, Robin ; Gascoin, Franck ; Cheviré, François ; Tricot, Sylvain ; Reece, Michael ; Bureau, Bruno (2017) Thermoelectric Properties of Highly-Crystallized Ge-Te-Se Glasses Doped with Cu/Bi Materials, 10 (4). p. 328. ISSN 1996-1944

[img] PDF
4MB

Official URL: http://doi.org/10.3390/ma10040328

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma10040328

Abstract

Chalcogenide semiconducting systems are of growing interest for mid-temperature range (~500 K) thermoelectric applications. In this work, Ge20Te77Se₃ glasses were intentionally crystallized by doping with Cu and Bi. These effectively-crystallized materials of composition (Ge20Te77Se₃)100-xMx (M = Cu or Bi; x = 5, 10, 15), obtained by vacuum-melting and quenching techniques, were found to have multiple crystalline phases and exhibit increased electrical conductivity due to excess hole concentration. These materials also have ultra-low thermal conductivity, especially the heavily-doped (Ge20Te77Se₃)100-xBix (x = 10, 15) samples, which possess lattice thermal conductivity of ~0.7 Wm-1 K-1 at 525 K due to the assumable formation of nano-precipitates rich in Bi, which are effective phonon scatterers. Owing to their high metallic behavior, Cu-doped samples did not manifest as low thermal conductivity as Bi-doped samples. The exceptionally low thermal conductivity of the Bi-doped materials did not, alone, significantly enhance the thermoelectric figure of merit, zT. The attempt to improve the thermoelectric properties by crystallizing the chalcogenide glass compositions by excess doping did not yield power factors comparable with the state of the art thermoelectric materials, as these highly electrically conductive crystallized materials could not retain the characteristic high Seebeck coefficient values of semiconducting telluride glasses.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to MDPI
ID Code:128185
Deposited On:03 Nov 2022 05:51
Last Modified:03 Nov 2022 05:51

Repository Staff Only: item control page