4.8 Article

Exceptional thermoelectric properties of flexible organic-inorganic hybrids with monodispersed and periodic nanophase

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-06251-9

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Funding

  1. Texas AM University
  2. Water initiative grant
  3. National Science Foundation grant [CMMI 1634858]
  4. Qatar National Priority Research Program
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51603036]
  6. Young Elite Scientists Sponsorship Program by CAST [2017QNRC001]
  7. TEES

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Flexible organic-inorganic hybrids are promising thermoelectric materials to recycle waste heat in versatile formats. However, current organic/inorganic hybrids suffer from inferior thermoelectric properties due to aggregate nanostructures. Here we demonstrate flexible organic-inorganic hybrids where size-tunable Bi2Te3 nanoparticles are discontinuously monodispersed in the continuous conductive polymer phase, completely distinct from traditional bi-continuous hybrids. Periodic nanofillers significantly scatter phonons while continuous conducting polymer phase provides favored electronic transport, resulting in ultrahigh power factor of similar to 1350 mu W m(-1) K-2 and ultralow in-plane thermal conductivity of similar to 0.7 W m(-1) K-1. Consequently, figure-of-merit (ZT) of 0.58 is obtained at room temperature, outperforming all reported organic materials and organic-inorganic hybrids. Thermoelectric properties of as-fabricated hybrids show negligible change for bending 100 cycles, indicating superior mechanical flexibility. These findings provide significant scientific foundation for shaping flexible thermoelectric functionality via synergistic integration of organic and inorganic components.

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