Grain-by-Grain Compositional Variations and Interstitial Metals - A New Route toward Achieving High Performance in Half-Heusler Thermoelectrics

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Abstract

Half-Heusler alloys based on TiNiSn are promising thermoelectric materials characterized by large power factors and good mechanical and thermal stabilities, but they are limited by large thermal conductivities. A variety of strategies have been used to disrupt their thermal transport, including alloying with heavy, generally expensive, elements and nanostructuring, enabling figures of merit, ZT ≥ 1 at elevated temperatures (>773 K). Here, we demonstrate an alternative strategy that is based around the partial segregation of excess Cu leading to grain-by-grain compositional variations, the formation of extruded Cu "wetting layers" between grains, and - most importantly - the presence of statistically distributed interstitials that reduce the thermal conductivity effectively through point-defect scattering. Our best TiNiCuySn (y ≤ 0.1) compositions have a temperature-averaged ZTdevice = 0.3-0.4 and estimated leg power outputs of 6-7 W cm-2 in the 323-773 K temperature range. This is a significant development as these materials were prepared using a straightforward processing method, do not contain any toxic, expensive, or scarce elements, and are therefore promising candidates for large-scale production.

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Barczak, S. A., Halpin, J. E., Buckman, J., Decourt, R., Pollet, M., Smith, R. I., … Bos, J. W. G. (2018). Grain-by-Grain Compositional Variations and Interstitial Metals - A New Route toward Achieving High Performance in Half-Heusler Thermoelectrics. ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 10(5), 4786–4793. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b14525

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