4.5 Article

Thermoelectric properties of tetragonal HfH2 under doping effect: First principles study

Journal

PHYSICA B-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 613, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.physb.2021.413001

Keywords

First principles; Hafnium hydride; electron thermal conductivity; Lattice thermal conductivity; electron and hole doping; tetragonal structure

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The study explores the impact of doping on the transport properties of HfH2. It is found that at low doping levels, both electrical and thermal conductivities increase with electron carrier concentrations, while irregular behavior is observed in the hole carrier concentration regime. Additionally, the results indicate that hole doping is more effective in achieving lower electron thermal conductivity in comparison to pure HfH2.
The effect of doping on the transport properties of HfH2 is explored using first-principles method and semiclassical Boltzmann approach. Thermoelectric properties such as electrical conductivity, Seebeck coefficient, electron and lattice thermal conductivity of doped and pure samples are calculated under various temperatures. The calculated results show that electrical and thermal conductivities increased with electron carrier concentrations similar to results reported by other studies in the low doping regime. While in the hole carrier concentration regime, irregular behavior is observed, especially in density of carriers equal to n = 4.6 x 1023 cm-3. Also, the lattice thermal conductivity and absolute value of Seebeck coefficient have been decreased with electron carrier concentration but these properties have irregular trend in the hole doping regime. Our results suggest that for achieving lower electron thermal conductivity with respect to pure HfH2, hole doping is much effective. Furthermore, the dispersive and large contribution of 5d orbital of Hf near the Fermi state and very low variation of L (Wiedemann-Franz factor) compared to the value of the free electron model L0, for pure and doped samples indicate that electrons in HfH2 have itinerant behavior and free-electron model is suitable to describe the transport properties of pure and doped samples of HfH2.

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