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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 February 2011
Grain boundary scattering provides an effective avenue to lower the thermal conductivity in polycrystalline thermoelectric materials, but it is hard to do this without simultaneously degrading the power factor that is the product of electrical conductivity and thermopower. An immediate question arises as to whether one can fabricate a thermoelectrically favorable grain boundary?
In this paper we present a proof-of-principle grain boundary engineering study in the pulverized p-Bi2Te3 system. Utilizing the lately developed hydrothermal nano-coating technique, we fabricated an Alkali-metal(s)-containing surface layer with few tens of nm thick on the p-Bi2Te3 bulk reference grain, where it becomes part of the grain boundary upon hotpressing densification. The electrical resistivity, thermopower, thermal conductivity and Hall coefficient measurements constitute solid evidence that this heterogeneous layer helps decouple the otherwise inter-related resistivity, thermopower and thermal conductivity. To optimize the figure of merit ZT, we carefully varied the ratio between Na, K and Rb concentrations. It was found that the sample treated in the solution with Na/Rb =1:2 achieved a ZT comparable with that of the commercial ingot; in the mean time, the compatibility factor and robustness of device were considerably improved. In principle this technique can be applied to other existing polycrystalline thermoelectric materials as a new “tuning knob”.