High-performance thermoelectricity in edge-over-edge zinc-porphyrin molecular wires

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Abstract

If high efficiency organic thermoelectric materials could be identified, then these would open the way to a range of energy harvesting technologies and Peltier coolers using flexible and transparent thin-film materials. We have compared the thermoelectric properties of three zinc porphyrin (ZnP) dimers and a ZnP monomer and found that the "edge-over-edge" dimer formed from stacked ZnP rings possesses a high electrical conductance, negligible phonon thermal conductance and a high Seebeck coefficient of the order of 300 μV K-1. These combine to yield a predicted room-temperature figure of merit of ZT ≈ 4, which is the highest room-temperature ZT ever reported for a single organic molecule. This high value of ZT is a consequence of the low phonon thermal conductance arising from the stacked nature of the porphyrin rings, which hinders phonon transport through the edge-over-edge molecule and enhances the Seebeck coefficient.

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Noori, M., Sadeghi, H., & Lambert, C. J. (2017). High-performance thermoelectricity in edge-over-edge zinc-porphyrin molecular wires. Nanoscale, 9(16), 5299–5304. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6nr09598d

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