Improved Thermoelectric Performance through Double Substitution in Shandite-Type Mixed-Metal Sulfides
Author(s) -
Panagiotis Mangelis,
Paz Vaqueiro,
Anthony V. Powell
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs applied energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.833
H-Index - 36
ISSN - 2574-0962
DOI - 10.1021/acsaem.9b02272
Subject(s) - seebeck coefficient , degenerate semiconductor , materials science , electrical resistivity and conductivity , thermoelectric effect , indium , doping , fermi level , condensed matter physics , thermal conductivity , thermoelectric materials , density of states , analytical chemistry (journal) , thermodynamics , chemistry , metallurgy , physics , composite material , optoelectronics , quantum mechanics , chromatography , electron
Substitution of tin by indium in shandite-type phases, A(3)Sn(2)S(2) with mixed Co/Fe occupancy of the A-sites is used to tune the Fermi level within a region of the density of states in which there are sharp, narrow bands of predominantly metal d-character. Materials of general formula Co2.5+xFe0.5-xSn2--yInyS2 (x = 0, 0.167; 0.0 <= y <= 0.7) have been prepared by solid-state reaction and the products characterized by powder X-ray diffraction. Electrical-transport property data reveal that the progressive depopulation of the upper conduction band as tin is replaced by indium increases the electrical resistivity, and the weakly temperature-dependent rho(T) becomes more semiconducting in character. Concomitant changes in the negative Seebeck coefficient, the temperature dependence of which becomes increasingly linear, suggests the more highly substituted materials are n-type degenerate semiconductors. The power factors of the substituted phases, while increased, exhibit a weak temperature dependence. The observed reductions in thermal conductivity are principally due to reductions in the charge-carrier contribution on hole doping. A maximum figure-of-merit of (ZT)(max) = 0.29 is obtained for the composition Co2.667Fe0.333Sn1.6In0.4S2 at 573 K: among the highest values for an n-type sulfide at this temperature.
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