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N-type nanostructured thermoelectric materials prepared from chemically synthesized ultrathin Bi 2Te 3 nanoplates

Cited 219 time in Web of Science Cited 227 time in Scopus
Authors

Son, Jae Sung; Choi, Moon Kee; Han, Mi-Kyung; Park, Kunsu; Kim, Jae-Yeol; Lim, Seong Joon; Oh, Myunghwan; Kuk, Young; Park, Chan; Kim, Sung-Jin; Hyeon, Taeghwan

Issue Date
2012-02
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
Nano Letters, Vol.12 No.2, pp.640-647
Abstract
We herein report on the large-scale synthesis of ultrathin Bi2Te3 nanoplates and subsequent spark plasma sintering to fabricate n-type nanostructured bulk thermoelectric materials. Bi2Te3 nanoplates were synthesized by the reaction between bismuth thiolate and tri-n-octylphosphine telluride in oleylamine. The thickness of the nanoplates was similar to 1 nm, which corresponds to a single layer in Bi2Te3 crystals. Bi2Te3 nanostructured bulk materials were prepared by sintering of surfactant-removed Bi2Te3 nanoplates using spark plasma sintering. We found that the grain size and density were strongly dependent on the sintering temperature, and we investigated the effect of the sintering temperature on the thermoelectric properties of the Bi2Te3 nanostructured bulk materials. The electrical conductivities increased with an increase in the sintering temperature, owing to the decreased interface density arising from the grain growth and densification. The Seebeck coefficients roughly decreased with an increase in the sintering temperature. Interestingly, the electron concentrations and mobilities strongly depended on the sintering temperature, suggesting the potential barrier scattering at interfaces and the doping effect of defects and organic residues. The thermal conductivities also increased with an increase in the sintering temperature because of grain growth and densification. The maximum thermoelectric figure-of-merit, ZT, is 0.62 at 400 K, which is one of the highest among the reported values of n-type nanostructured materials based on chemically synthesized nanoparticles. This increase in ZT shows the possibility of the preparation of highly efficient thermoelectric materials by chemical synthesis.
ISSN
1530-6984
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/166192
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/nl203389x
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  • College of Engineering
  • School of Chemical and Biological Engineering
Research Area Chemistry, Materials Science

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