4.6 Article

High-Throughput Screening of High-Performance Thermoelectric Materials with Gibbs Free Energy and Electronegativity

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma16155399

Keywords

high-throughput screening; thermoelectric materials; Gibbs free energy; electronegativity; screening criteria for thermoelectric materials

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Thermoelectric (TE) materials are crucial for converting thermal energy into electrical energy. A new method for high-throughput screening of TE materials is proposed, based on the objective relationship among the molar Gibbs free energy, the chemical potential, the Fermi level, the electronegativity, and the TE property of a material. By calculating various TE materials, it is found that the molar Gibbs free energy and electronegativity can be used as criteria to judge the potential of materials for high-performance TE materials.
Thermoelectric (TE) materials are an important class of energy materials that can directly convert thermal energy into electrical energy. Screening high-performance thermoelectric materials and improving their TE properties are important goals of TE materials research. Based on the objective relationship among the molar Gibbs free energy (G(m)), the chemical potential, the Fermi level, the electronegativity (X) and the TE property of a material, a new method for screening TE materials with high throughput is proposed. This method requires no experiments and no first principle or Ab initio calculation. It only needs to find or calculate the molar Gibbs free energy and electronegativity of the material. Here, by calculating a variety of typical and atypical TE materials, it is found that the molar Gibbs free energy of Bi2Te3 and Sb2Te3 from 298 to 600 K (G(m) = -130.20 similar to-248.82 kJ/mol) and the electronegativity of Bi2Te3 and Sb2Te3 and PbTe (X = 1.80 similar to 2.21) can be used as criteria to judge the potential of materials to become high-performance TE materials. For good TE compounds, G(m) and X are required to meet the corresponding standards at the same time. By taking G(m) = -130.20 similar to-248.82 kJ/mol and X = 1.80 similar to 2.21 as screening criteria for high performance TE materials, it is found that the G(m) and X of all 15 typical TE materials and 9 widely studied TE materials meet the requirement very well, except for the X of Mg2Si, and 64 pure substances are screened as potential TE materials from 102 atypical TE materials. In addition, with reference to their electronegativity, 44 pure substances are selected directly from a thermochemical data book as potential high-performance TE materials. A particular finding is that several carbides, such as Be2C, CaC2, BaC2, SmC2, TaC and NbC, may have certain TE properties. Because the Gm and X of pure substances can be easily found in thermochemical data books and calculated using the X of pure elements, respectively, the G(m) and X of materials can be used as good high-throughput screening criteria for predicting TE properties.

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