Abstract
We have studied the effects of structural vacancies on the thermoelectric properties of the ternary compounds (Cu2Te)1-x(Ga 2Te3)x (x=0.5, 0.55, 0.571, 0.6, 0.625, 0.667 and 0.75), which are solid solutions found in the pseudo-binary phase diagram for Cu2Te and Ga2Te3, and possesses tunable structural vacancy concentrations. This materials system is not suitable due to the cost and scarcity of the constituent elements, but the vacancy behavior is well understood and will provide a valuable test case for other systems more suitable from the standpoint of cost and abundance of raw materials, which also possesses these vacancy features, but whose structural characterization is lacking at this stage. We find that the nominally defect free phase CuGaTe 2 possess the highest ZT (ZT=S2T/ρκ, where S is the Seebeck coefficient and ρ is the electrical resistivity κ is the thermal conductivity and T is the absolute temperature) which approaches 1 at 840 K and seems to continuously increase above this temperature. This result is due to the unexpectedly low thermal conductivity found for this material at high temperature. The low thermal conductivity was caused by strong Umklapp (thermally resistive scattering processes involving three phonons) phonon scattering. We find that due to the coincidentally strong scattering of carriers by the structural defects that higher concentrations of these features lead to poor electrical transport properties and decreased ZT.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 262-269 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Journal of Solid State Chemistry |
Volume | 201 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - May 2013 |
Funding
JRS would like to thank J. F. Herbst and M. W. Verbrugge for their continued support and encouragement. The work at GM is supported by GM and by DOE under corporate agreement DE-FC26-04NT42278. This work is also supported by Oak Ridge Nationals Laboratory, managed by UT Battelle LLC, for the Department of Energy under contract DE-AC05000OR22725.
Keywords
- Chalcopyrite
- Thermal conductivity
- Thermoelectrics
- Vacancies