Bonding Hierarchy Induced High Thermoelectric Performance in Layered Zintl Compound BaAu2P4
ORAL
Abstract
The search for new thermoelectric materials has gained rapid progress in recent years as thermoelectric technology offers the potential for environmentally friendly and sustainable energy conversion methods from waste heat to electricity. Using first-principles calculations based on density functional theory we show that bonding hierarchy gives rise to high thermoelectric performance in BaAu2P4, a layered Zintl compound with a small band gap. BaAu2P4 exhibits crystallographic heterogeneity in which rigid [Au2P4]2− units are separated by layers of Ba2+ cations, which are bonded relatively weakly to the lattice through electrostatic interactions. While the covalently bonded chains of phosphorus atoms facilitate large electrical conductivity, the presence of multiple bands near the Fermi level gives rise to an enhanced Seebeck coefficient. On the other hand, the loosely bound Ba along with the heavy Au atoms strongly scatter the heat carrying acoustic phonons, inducing a very low lattice thermal conductivity along the stacking direction. As a consequence of this coexisting rigid and fluctuating sublattices, BaAu2P4 exhibits a large power factor and low lattice thermal conductivity, which results in a high thermoelectric figure of merit (zT).
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Presenters
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Koushik Pal
Northwestern University
Authors
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Koushik Pal
Northwestern University
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Jiangang He
Northwestern University, Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
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Christopher Wolverton
Northwestern University, Northwestern Univeristy, Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University