Thermoelectric materials by using two-dimensional materials with negative correlation between electrical and thermal conductivity

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Abstract

In general, in thermoelectric materials the electrical conductivity σ and thermal conductivity κ are related and thus cannot be controlled independently. Previously, to maximize the thermoelectric figure of merit in state-of-the-art materials, differences in relative scaling between σ and κ as dimensions are reduced to approach the nanoscale were utilized. Here we present an approach to thermoelectric materials using tin disulfide, SnS2, nanosheets that demonstrated a negative correlation between σ and κ. In other words, as the thickness of SnS2 decreased, σ increased whereas κ decreased. This approach leads to a thermoelectric figure of merit increase to 0.13 at 300 K, a factor ~1,000 times greater than previously reported bulk single-crystal SnS2. The Seebeck coefficient obtained for our two-dimensional SnS2 nanosheets was 34.7 mV K-1 for 16-nm-thick samples at 300 K.

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Lee, M. J., Ahn, J. H., Sung, J. H., Heo, H., Jeon, S. G., Lee, W., … Jo, M. H. (2016). Thermoelectric materials by using two-dimensional materials with negative correlation between electrical and thermal conductivity. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12011

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