4.6 Article

Local structural distortions and reduced thermal conductivity in Ge-substituted chalcopyrite

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 10, Issue 44, Pages 23874-23885

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2ta06443j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UKRI Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) - EPSRC, UK [EP/T020040/1]
  2. EPSRC [EP/W021080/1]

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Partial substitution of germanium in chalcopyrite leads to an enhancement of thermoelectric properties due to local structural distortion, lattice softening, and the appearance of resonant phonon modes. The weak chemical bonding of germanium with sulphur also contributes to a high Seebeck coefficient and an improvement in the power factor.
Chalcopyrite, CuFeS2 is considered one of the promising n-type thermoelectric materials with high natural abundance as a mineral. In this work, partial substitution of germanium in materials CuFe1-xGexS2, (0.0 <= x <= 0.10), leads to an almost six-fold enhancement of thermoelectric properties. X-Ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) reveals that germanium is present in two oxidation states: Ge2+ and Ge4+. The stereochemically-active 4s(2) lone-pair of electrons associated with Ge2+ induces a local structural distortion. Pair-distribution function (PDF) analysis reveal that Ge2+ ions are displaced from the centre of the GeS4 tetrahedron towards a triangular face, leading to pseudo-trigonal pyramidal coordination. This distortion is accompanied by lattice softening and an increase of the strain-fluctuation scattering parameter (Gamma(S)), leading to a decrease in thermal conductivity. Phonon calculations demonstrate that germanium substitution leads to the appearance of resonant phonon modes. These modes lie close in energy to the acoustic and low-energy optical modes of the host matrix, with which they can interact, providing an additional mechanism for reducing the thermal conductivity. The weak chemical bonding of germanium with sulphur also leads to localized electronic states near the Fermi level which results in a high density-of-states effective mass, enabling a relatively high Seebeck coefficient to be maintained, despite the reduced electrical resistivity. This combination produces an almost three-fold improvement in the power factor, which when coupled with the substantial reduction in thermal conductivity, leads to a maximum figure-of-merit, zT similar to 0.4 at 723 K for CuFe0.94Ge0.06S2.

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