1 / 14

T hermoelectric properties of ultra-thin Bi 2 Te 3 films

DARPA-TI meeting, August 15, 2012. T hermoelectric properties of ultra-thin Bi 2 Te 3 films. Jesse Maassen and Mark Lundstrom. Network for Computational Nanotechnology, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN USA. Motivation.

billie
Télécharger la présentation

T hermoelectric properties of ultra-thin Bi 2 Te 3 films

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DARPA-TI meeting, August 15, 2012 Thermoelectric properties of ultra-thin Bi2Te3 films Jesse Maassen and Mark Lundstrom Network for Computational Nanotechnology, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN USA

  2. Motivation • In recent years, much research has focused energy-related science and technology, in particular thermoelectrics. • Some of the best known thermoelectric materials happen to be topological insulators (e.g., Bi2Te3). • Work has appeared showing that TI surface states in ultra-thin films (<10 nm) can lead to enhanced thermoelectric properties. ZT ~ 2 P. Ghaemi, R.S.K. Mong and J. Moore, Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 166603 (2010). ZT ~ 7 F. Zahid and R. Lake, Appl. Phys. Lett. 97, 212102 (2010). The work presented here reproduces and expands these results.

  3. Figure-of-merit G : Electrical conductance S : Seebeck coefficient ke: Electronic thermal conductance kl: Lattice thermal conductance Thermoelectric figure-of-merit : (open circuit, zero electrical current) Material properties (open circuit, zero electrical current) ΔT = T1 – T2 T2 T1 Ie IQ V1 V2 ΔV = V1 – V2

  4. Thermoelectric transport coefficients Differential conductivity/conductance is the central quantity for thermoelectric calculations. Conductivity Seebeck Electronic thermal conductivity (zero field) Electronic thermal conductivity (zero current)

  5. Conductance / conductivity in the Landauer picture Scattering T = 1 (ballistic) T = λ/ L (diffusive) Band structure CONDUCTANCE CONDUCTIVITY Conductance (conductivity) is better suited to describe ballistic (diffusive) transport.

  6. Number of conducting channels • How do we calculate the # of conducting channels (modes)? • Let’s consider a simple example: 2D film with parabolic Ek. M(E,ky) Transport E(k) E M(E,ky) kx 0 1 2 kx ky 1 E M(E) 0 0 ky E

  7. Ultra-thin Bi2Te3 films Te1 : A site Bi c-axis : B site Te2 Bi : C site Te1 1 quintuple layer 6 QL Experimental bulk lattice parameters are assumed: 5 QL ab-axis = 4.38 Å c-axis = 30.49 Å 4 QL 3 QL 2 QL 1 QL 0.74 nm 1.76 nm 2.77 nm 3.79 nm 4.81 nm 5.82 nm

  8. Band structure • Band gap exists only for 1QL and 2QL. • For QL>2, surface state close the gap. Computed using density functional theory (DFT), with the VASP simulation package.

  9. Distribution of modes • Modes corresponds to the number of quantum conducting channels. • 1QL, 2QL, 3QL are different, but QL>4 are very similar. • Sharp increase in modes at the valence edge only with 1QL. • Analytical model by Moore [PRL 105, 166603 (2010)], only well describes the conduction band. • Scaling factor disprepancy with the result of Zahid & Lake [APL 97, 212102 (2010)].

  10. Why sharp increase with 1QL? Answer comes from analyzing the k-resolved modes.

  11. Seebeck coefficient • Large positive Seebeck with 1 QL. • Seebeck decreases with increasing film thickness. • Max. Seebeck with 1 QL, the result of a larger band gap. ΔEbulk ΔE1QL

  12. Power factor • 1 QL : maximum PF is 6-7x larger than others. • Large PF results from enhanced conduction near the VB edge. • Demonstration of TE enhancement through band structure. Numerator of ZT :

  13. Figure-of-merit • 1 QL : potential ZT 4x larger than bulk. • QL > 2 leads to low ZT, due to small (or zero) band gap.

  14. Conclusions / future work • Electronic enhancement of ZT with 1 QL, due to the shape of the VB. • Strict constraint on thickness, enhancement only predicted for 1 QL. • Future work: • Impact of scattering on TE parameters. • Predict lattice thermal conductivity (phonon transport). • Study thin films of Bi2Se3, Sb2Te3 and MoS2.

More Related