Doping narrow-gap semiconductors is a well-established approach for designing efficient thermoelectric materials. Semiconducting half-Heusler (HH) and full-Heusler (FH) compounds have garnered significant interest within the thermoelectric field, yet the number of exceptional candidates remains relatively small. It is recently shown that the vacancy-filling approach is a viable strategy for expanding the Heusler family. Here, a range of near-semiconducting Heuslers, TiFeCuSb, creating a composition continuum that adheres to the Slater-Pauling electron counting rule are theoretically designed and experimentally synthesized. The stochastic and incomplete occupation of vacancy sites within these materials imparts continuously changing electrical conductivities, ranging from a good semiconductor with low carrier concentration in the endpoint TiFeCuSb to a heavily doped p-type semiconductor with a stoichiometry of TiFeCuSb. The optimal thermoelectric performance is experimentally observed in the intermediate compound TiFeCuSb, achieving a peak figure of merit of 0.87 at 923 K. These findings demonstrate that vacancy-filling Heusler compounds offer substantial opportunities for developing advanced thermoelectric materials.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202407578 | DOI Listing |
Adv Sci (Weinh)
October 2024
Interdisciplinary Materials Research Center, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, 201804, China.
Doping narrow-gap semiconductors is a well-established approach for designing efficient thermoelectric materials. Semiconducting half-Heusler (HH) and full-Heusler (FH) compounds have garnered significant interest within the thermoelectric field, yet the number of exceptional candidates remains relatively small. It is recently shown that the vacancy-filling approach is a viable strategy for expanding the Heusler family.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Mater
August 2024
Interdisciplinary Materials Research Center, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, 201804, China.
To improve thermoelectric efficiency, various tactics have been employed with considerable success to decouple intertwined material attributes. However, the integration of magnetism, derived from the unique spin characteristic that other methods cannot replicate, has been comparatively underexplored and presents an ongoing intellectual challenge. A previous research has shown that vacancy-filling Heuslers offer a highly adaptable framework for modulating thermoelectric properties.
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