4.8 Article

High thermoelectric performance enabled by convergence of nested conduction bands in Pb7Bi4Se13 with low thermal conductivity

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25119-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Singapore MOE Tier 2 [MOE2018-T2-1-010]
  2. Singapore A*STAR Pharos Program SERC [1527200022]
  3. Singapore A*STAR project [A19D9a0096]
  4. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI [JP 19F19057]
  5. International Research Fellowship of JSPS
  6. Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC)
  7. Presidential Postdoctoral Fellowship, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore [03INS000973C150]
  8. Accelerated Materials Development for Manufacturing Program at A*STAR via the AME Programmatic Fund by the Agency for Science, Technology and Research [A1898b0043]

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The study found that lillianite materials based on Pb7Bi4Se13 exhibit superior thermoelectric performance, offering potential for improving energy efficiency and serving as promising candidates for highly efficient thermoelectric energy conversion.
Thermoelectrics enable waste heat recovery, holding promises in relieving energy and environmental crisis. Lillianite materials have been long-term ignored due to low thermoelectric efficiency. Herein we report the discovery of superior thermoelectric performance in Pb7Bi4Se13 based lillianites, with a peak figure of merit, zT of 1.35 at 800 K and a high average zT of 0.92 (450-800 K). A unique quality factor is established to predict and evaluate thermoelectric performances. It considers both band nonparabolicity and band gaps, commonly negligible in conventional quality factors. Such appealing performance is attributed to the convergence of effectively nested conduction bands, providing a high number of valley degeneracy, and a low thermal conductivity, stemming from large lattice anharmonicity, low-frequency localized Einstein modes and the coexistence of high-density moire fringes and nanoscale defects. This work rekindles the vision that Pb7Bi4Se13 based lillianites are promising candidates for highly efficient thermoelectric energy conversion.

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