Thermoelectric pProperties of hHigh-pPerformance n-tType lLead tTelluride mMeasured iInsSitu in a nNuclear rReactor cCore

Thermoelectric generators are promising energy sources in remote or harsh environments such as the core of a nuclear reactor where they can power remote sensors and other in-core instrumentation. A high-performance n-type lead telluride material Pb0.975Ga0.025Te–0.25% ZnTe was inserted into the core...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials chemistry. A, Materials for energy and sustainability Materials for energy and sustainability, 2022-10, Vol.10 (40), p.21266-21272
Hauptverfasser: Kempf, Nicholas, Zhong-Zhen Luo, Xie, Hongyao, Daw, Joshua, Kanatzidis, Mercouri G, Zhang, Yanliang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Thermoelectric generators are promising energy sources in remote or harsh environments such as the core of a nuclear reactor where they can power remote sensors and other in-core instrumentation. A high-performance n-type lead telluride material Pb0.975Ga0.025Te–0.25% ZnTe was inserted into the core of a nuclear reactor and thermoelectric material properties were continuously monitored while it was irradiated for 228 MW-days to a fast neutron (>1.0 MeV) fluence of 2.0 × ×1020 n/cm−2. The electrical conductivity increased within hours of the reactor starting with a peak increase to 343% of the non-irradiated electrical conductivity at the same temperatures. The electrical conductivity subsequently decreased but leveled off at 155–-161% of the non-irradiated value near the end of the reactor cycle. The thermoelectric power factor and device power density peaked at 132% of the non-irradiated values within the first few days but fell to 90% of the non-irradiated values around day 9 due to a moderate drop in Seebeck coefficient to 57% of the non-irradiated value. Beyond day 9, the Seebeck coefficient steadily increased until leveling off at 81–-85% of its non-irradiated value near the end of the cycle. After the initial transient changes in Seebeck coefficient and electrical conductivity, the power factor of the material in-core was approximately the same as the measured value before irradiation. However, due to a sudden increase in Seebeck coefficient and electrical conductivity during the last few days, the power factor at the end of the reactor cycle was 8–-10% greater than the power factor of the non-irradiated material at the same temperatures. These results indicate that the PbTe based thermoelectric material studied in this work can serve as a solid-state power source for operation in the harsh environment of a nuclear reactor core.
ISSN:2050-7488
2050-7496
DOI:10.1039/d2ta04409a