Effects of Intermixing in Sb 2 Te 3 /Ge 1+ x Te Multilayers on the Thermoelectric Power Factor

Over the past few decades, telluride-based chalcogenide multilayers, such as PbSeTe/PbTe, Bi Te /Sb Te , and Bi Te /Bi Se , were shown to be promising high-performance thermoelectric films. However, the stability of performance in operating environments, in particular, influenced by intermixing of t...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied materials & interfaces 2023-05, Vol.15 (18), p.22672-22683
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Heng, Ahmadi, Majid, Ginanjar, Wastu Wisesa, Blake, Graeme R, Kooi, Bart J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Over the past few decades, telluride-based chalcogenide multilayers, such as PbSeTe/PbTe, Bi Te /Sb Te , and Bi Te /Bi Se , were shown to be promising high-performance thermoelectric films. However, the stability of performance in operating environments, in particular, influenced by intermixing of the sublayers, has been studied rarely. In the present work, the nanostructure, thermal stability, and thermoelectric power factor of Sb Te /Ge Te multilayers prepared by pulsed laser deposition are investigated by transmission electron microscopy and Seebeck coefficient/electrical conductivity measurements performed during thermal cycling. Highly textured Sb Te films show p-type semiconducting behavior with superior power factor, while Ge Te films exhibit n-type semiconducting behavior. The elemental mappings indicate that the as-deposited multilayers have well-defined layered structures. Upon heating to 210 °C, these layer structures are unstable against intermixing of sublayers; nanostructural changes occur on initial heating, even though the highest temperature is close to the deposition temperature. Furthermore, the diffusion is more extensive at domain boundaries leading to locally inclined structures there. The Sb Te sublayers gradually dissolve into Ge Te. This dissolution depends markedly on the relative Ge Te film thickness. Rather, full dissolution occurs rapidly at 210 °C when the Ge Te sublayer is substantially thicker than that of Sb Te , whereas the dissolution is very limited when the Ge Te sublayer is substantially thinner. The resulting variations of the nanostructure influence the Seebeck coefficient and electrical conductivity and thus the power factor in a systematic manner. Our results shed light on a previously unreported correlation of the power factor with the nanostructural evolution of unstable telluride multilayers.
ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.3c00869