Noble-metal-based chalcogenide materials recently gained massive attention in the field of thermoelectrics. In most cases, materials are synthesized using (i) high-temperature solid-state reactions or (ii) soft chemical methods where temperature requirements are lower than those of solid-state reactions (generally below 400 °C). Herein, we present a simple, surfactant-free, room-temperature, and energy-efficient synthesis of AgCuS nanocrystals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWeyl semimetal is a unique topological phase with topologically protected band crossings in the bulk and robust surface states called Fermi arcs. Weyl nodes always appear in pairs with opposite chiralities, and they need to have either time-reversal or inversion symmetry broken. When the time-reversal symmetry is broken the minimum number of Weyl points (WPs) is two.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSulfides and selenides of copper and silver have been intensively studied, particularly as potentially efficient thermoelectrics. Ag3CuS2 (jalpaite) is a related material. However very little is known about its physical properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKagome magnets possess several novel nontrivial topological features owing to the strong correlation between topology and magnetism that extends to their applications in the field of thermoelectricity. Conventional thermoelectric (TE) devices use the Seebeck effect to convert heat into electrical energy. In contrast, transverse thermoelectric devices based on the Nernst effect are attracting recent attention due to their unique transverse geometry, which uses a single material to eliminate the need for a multitude of electrical connections compared to conventional TE devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagnetic topological insulators provide an important platform for realizing several exotic quantum phenomena, such as the axion insulating state and the quantum anomalous Hall effect, owing to the interplay between topology and magnetism. MnBiTe is a two-dimensional Z antiferromagnetic (AFM) topological insulator with a Néel temperature of ∼13 K. In AFM materials, the topological Hall effect (THE) is observed owing to the existence of nontrivial spin structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interplay between topology and magnetism has recently sparked the frontier studies of magnetic topological materials that exhibit intriguing anomalous Hall and Nernst effects owning to the large intrinsic Berry curvature (BC). To better understand the anomalous quantum transport properties of these materials and their implications for future applications such as electronic and thermoelectric devices, it is crucial to discover more novel material platforms for performing anomalous transverse transport studies. Here, it is experimentally demonstrated that low-cost Fe-based Heusler compounds exhibit large anomalous Hall and Nernst effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTopological magnets comprising 2D magnetic layers with Curie temperatures (T ) exceeding room temperature are key for dissipationless quantum transport devices. However, the identification of a material with 2D ferromagnetic planes that exhibits an out-of-plane-magnetization remains a challenge. This study reports a ferromagnetic, topological, nodal-line, and semimetal MnAlGe composed of square-net Mn layers that are separated by nonmagnetic Al-Ge spacers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTopology, a mathematical concept, has recently become a popular and truly transdisciplinary topic encompassing condensed matter physics, solid state chemistry, and materials science. Since there is a direct connection between real space, namely atoms, valence electrons, bonds, and orbitals, and reciprocal space, namely bands and Fermi surfaces, via symmetry and topology, classifying topological materials within a single-particle picture is possible. Currently, most materials are classified as trivial insulators, semimetals, and metals or as topological insulators, Dirac and Weyl nodal-line semimetals, and topological metals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNon-symmorphic chiral topological crystals host exotic multifold fermions, and their associated Fermi arcs helically wrap around and expand throughout the Brillouin zone between the high-symmetry center and surface-corner momenta. However, Fermi-arc splitting and realization of the theoretically proposed maximal Chern number rely heavily on the spin-orbit coupling (SOC) strength. In the present work, we investigate the topological states of a new chiral crystal, PtGa, which has the strongest SOC among all chiral crystals reported to date.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHighly conductive topological semimetals with exotic electronic structures offer fertile ground for the investigation of the electrical and thermal transport behavior of quasiparticles. Here, we find that the layer-structured Dirac semimetal PtSn exhibits a largely suppressed thermal conductivity under a magnetic field. At low temperatures, a dramatic decrease in the thermal conductivity of PtSn by more than two orders of magnitude is obtained at 9 T.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTopological Weyl semimetals have recently attracted considerable attention among materials scientists as their properties are predicted to be protected against perturbations such as lattice distortion and chemical substitution. However, any experimental proof of such robustness is still lacking. In this study, we experimentally demonstrate that the topological properties of the ferromagnetic kagomé compound CoSnS are preserved upon Ni substitution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWeyl and Dirac fermions have created much attention in condensed matter physics and materials science. Recently, several additional distinct types of fermions have been predicted. Here, we report ultra-high electrical conductivity in MoP at low temperature, which has recently been established as a triple point fermion material.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe discovery of magnetic topological semimetals has recently attracted significant attention in the field of topology and thermoelectrics. In a thermoelectric device based on the Nernst geometry, an external magnet is required as an integral part. Reported is a zero-field Nernst effect in a newly discovered hard-ferromagnetic kagome-lattice Weyl-semimetal Co Sn S .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrystalline solids with intrinsically low lattice thermal conductivity (κ ) are crucial to realizing high-performance thermoelectric (TE) materials. Herein, we show an ultralow κ of 0.35 Wm K in AgCuTe, which has a remarkable TE figure-of-merit, zT of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBulk AgBiS2 crystallizes in a trigonal crystal structure (space group, P3̅m1) at room temperature, which transforms to a cation disordered rock salt structure (space group, Fm3̅m) at ∼473 K. Surprisingly, at room temperature, a solution-grown nanocrystal of AgBiS2 crystallizes in a metastable Ag/Bi ordered cubic structure, which transforms to a thermodynamically stable disorded cubic structure at 610 K. Moreover, the order-disorder transition in nanocrystalline AgBiS2 is associated with an unusual change in thermopower.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCopper and silver based chalcogenides, chalco-halides, and halides form a unique class of semiconductors, as they display mixed ionic and electronic conduction in their superionic phase. These compounds are composed of softly coupled cationic and anionic substructures, and undergo a transition to a superionic phase displaying changes in the substructure of their mobile ions with varying temperature. Here, we demonstrate a facile, ambient and capping agent free solution based synthesis of AgCuS nanocrystals and their temperature dependent (300-550 K) thermoelectric properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
April 2015
Modern technological inventions have been going through a "renaissance" period. Development of new materials and understanding of fundamental structure-property correlations are the important steps to move further for advanced technologies. In modern technologies, inorganic semiconductors are the leading materials which are extensively used for different applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSemiconductors have been fundamental to various devices that are typically operated with electric field, such as transistors, memories, sensors, and resistive switches. There is growing interest in the development of novel inorganic materials for use in transistors and semiconductor switches, which can be operated with a temperature gradient. Here, we show that a crystalline semiconducting noble metal sulfide, AgCuS, exhibits a sharp temperature dependent reversible p-n-p type conduction switching, along with a colossal change in the thermopower (ΔS of ~1757 μV K(-1)) at the superionic phase transition (T of ~364 K).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLayered lead bismuth selenide, PbBi2Se4, an intergrowth compound of PbSe (rocksalt) and Bi2Se3 (hexagonal), is a topological insulator in the bulk phase. We present a simple solution based synthesis of two dimensional (2D) few seven atomic (septuple) layered PbBi2Se4 nanosheets (4-7 nm thick) for the first time. The excellent electrical transport in ultrathin PbBi2Se4 is attributed to the presence of dominant surface states that offer high electrical mobility (∼153 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1)) and scattering resistant carriers.
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