A new technique for measuring thermal conductivity with significantly improved accuracy is presented. By using the Peltier effect to counterbalance an imposed temperature difference, a completely isothermal, steady-state condition can be obtained across a sample. In this condition, extraneous parasitic heat flows that would otherwise cause error can be eliminated entirely. The technique is used to determine the thermal conductivity of p-type and n-type samples of (Bi,Sb) 2(Te,Se) 3 materials, and thermal conductivity values of 1.47 W/m K and 1.48 W/m K are obtained respectively. To validate this technique, those samples were assembled into a Peltier cooling device. The agreement between the Seebeck coefficient measured individually and from the assembled device were within 0.5%, and the corresponding thermal conductivity was consistent with the individual measurements with less than 2% error. © 2012 TMS (outside the USA).
CITATION STYLE
Taylor, P. J., Maddux, J. R., & Uppal, P. N. (2012). Measurement of thermal conductivity using steady-state isothermal conditions and validation by comparison with thermoelectric device performance. Journal of Electronic Materials, 41(9), 2307–2312. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11664-012-2178-3
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.