Bayikadi, KS, Sankar R, Wu CT, Xia C, Chen Y, Chen L-C, Chen K-H, Chou F-C.
2019.
Enhanced thermoelectric performance of GeTe through in situ microdomain and Ge-vacancy control, 2019. Journal of Materials Chemistry A. 7(25):15181-15189.: The Royal Society of Chemistry
AbstractA highly reproducible sample preparation method for pure GeTe in a rhombohedral structure without converting to the cubic structure up to ∼500 °C is reported to show control of the Ge-vacancy level and the corresponding herringbone-structured microdomains. The thermoelectric figure-of-merit (ZT) for GeTe powder could be raised from ∼0.8 to 1.37 at high temperature (HT) near ∼500 °C by tuning the Ge-vacancy level through the applied reversible in situ route, which made it highly controllable and reproducible. The enhanced ZT of GeTe was found to be strongly correlated with both its significantly increased Seebeck coefficient (∼161 μV K−1 at 500 °C) and reduced thermal conductivity (∼2.62 W m−1 K−1 at 500 °C) for a sample with nearly vacancy-free thicker herringbone-structured microdomains in the suppressed rhombohedral-to-cubic structure phase transformation. The microdomain and crystal structures were identified with HR-TEM (high-resolution transmission electron microscopy) and powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), while electron probe micro-analysis (EPMA) was used to confirm the stoichiometry changes of Ge : Te. Theoretical calculations for GeTe with various Ge-vacancy levels suggested that the Fermi level shifts toward the valence band as a function of increasing the Ge-vacancy level, which is consistent with the increased hole-type carrier concentration (n) and effective mass (m*) deduced from the Hall measurements. The uniquely prepared sample of a near-vacancy-free GeTe in a rhombohedral structure at high temperature favoured an enhanced Seebeck coefficient in view of the converging L- and Σ-bands of the heavy effective mass at the Fermi level, while the high density domain boundaries for the domain of low carrier density were shown to reduce the total thermal conductivity effectively.
Bayikadi, KS, Wu CT, Chen L-C, Chen K-H, Chou F-C, Sankar R.
2020.
Synergistic optimization of thermoelectric performance of Sb doped GeTe with a strained domain and domain boundaries, 2020. Journal of Materials Chemistry A. 8(10):5332-5341.: The Royal Society of Chemistry
AbstractIn addition to the Ge-vacancy control of GeTe, the antimony (Sb) substitution of GeTe for the improvement of thermoelectric performance is explored for Ge1−xSbxTe with x = 0.08–0.12. The concomitant carrier concentration (n) and the aliovalent Sb ion substitution led to an optimal doping level of x = 0.10 to show ZT ∼ 2.35 near ∼800 K, which is significantly higher than those single- and multi-element substitution studies of the GeTe system reported in the literature. In addition, Ge0.9Sb0.1Te demonstrates an impressively high power factor of ∼36 μW cm−1 K−2 and a low thermal conductivity of ∼1.1 W m−1 K−1 at 800 K. The enhanced ZT level for Ge0.9Sb0.1Te is explained through a systematic investigation of micro-structural change and strain analysis from room temperature to 800 K. A significant reduction of lattice thermal conductivity (κlat) is identified and explained by the Sb substitution-introduced strained and widened domain boundaries for the herringbone domain structure of Ge0.9Sb0.1Te. The Sb substitution created multiple forms of strain near the defect centre, the herringbone domain structure, and widened tensile/compressive domain boundaries to support phonon scattering that covers a wide frequency range of the phonon spectrum to reduce lattice thermal conductivity effectively.
Berzina, B, Trinkler L, Jakimovica D, Korsaks V, Grabis J, Steins I, Palcevskis, Bellucci S, Chen LC, Chattopadhyay S t, Chen KH.
2009.
Spectral characterization of bulk and nanostructuredaluminum nitride. J. Nanophotonics. 3:031950.
Billo, T, Fu F-Y, Raghunath P, Shown I, Chen W-F, Lien H-T, Shen T-H, Lee J-F, Chan T-S, Huang K-Y, Wu C-I, Lin MC, Hwang J-S, Lee C-H, Chen L-C, Chen K-H.
2018.
Ni-Nanocluster Modified Black TiO2 with Dual Active Sites for Selective Photocatalytic CO2 Reduction. Small. 14:1702928–n/a., Number 2
AbstractOne of the key challenges in artificial photosynthesis is to design a photocatalyst that can bind and activate the CO2 molecule with the smallest possible activation energy and produce selective hydrocarbon products. In this contribution, a combined experimental and computational study on Ni-nanocluster loaded black TiO2 (Ni/TiO2[Vo]) with built-in dual active sites for selective photocatalytic CO2 conversion is reported. The findings reveal that the synergistic effects of deliberately induced Ni nanoclusters and oxygen vacancies provide (1) energetically stable CO2 binding sites with the lowest activation energy (0.08 eV), (2) highly reactive sites, (3) a fast electron transfer pathway, and (4) enhanced light harvesting by lowering the bandgap. The Ni/TiO2[Vo] photocatalyst has demonstrated highly selective and enhanced photocatalytic activity of more than 18 times higher solar fuel production than the commercial TiO2 (P-25). An insight into the mechanisms of interfacial charge transfer and product formation is explored.