Publication: Polycrystalline ZrTe5 parametrized as a narrow-band-gap semiconductor for thermoelectric performance
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Miller, Samuel A.
Witting, Ian
Peng, Lintao
Rettie, Alexander J. E.
Gorai, Prashun
Chung, Duck Young
Kanatzidis, Mercouri G.
Grayson, Matthew
Stevanovic, Vladan
Toberer, Eric S.
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Abstract
The transition-metal pentatellurides HfTe 5 and ZrTe 5 have been studied for their exotic transport properties with much debate over the transport mechanism, band gap, and cause of the resistivity behavior, including a large low-temperature resistivity peak. Single crystals grown by the chemical-vapor-transport method have shown an n-p transition of the Seebeck coefficient at the same temperature as a peak in the resistivity. We show that behavior similar to that of single crystals can be observed in iodine-doped polycrystalline samples but that undoped polycrystalline samples exhibit drastically different properties: they are p type over the entire temperature range. Additionally, the thermal conductivity for polycrystalline samples is much lower, 1.5 Wm(-1) K-1, than previously reported for single crystals. It is found that the polycrystalline ZrTe 5 system can be modeled as a simple semiconductor with conduction and valence bands both contributing to transport, separated by a band gap of 20 meV. This model demonstrates to first order that a simple two-band model can explain the transition from n-to p-type behavior and the cause of the anomalous resistivity peak. Combined with the experimental data, the two-band model shows that carrier concentration variation is responsible for differences in behavior between samples. Using the twoband model, the thermoelectric performance at different doping levels is predicted, finding zT = 0.2 and 0.1 for p and n type, respectively, at 300 K, and zT = 0.23 and 0.32 for p and n type at 600 K. Given the reasonably high zT that is comparable in magnitude for both n and p type, a thermoelectric device with a single compound used for both legs is feasible.
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American Physical Society (APS)
Subject
Physics, applied
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Source
Physical Review Applied
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DOI
10.1103/PhysRevApplied.9.014025
