Affiliation:
1. School of Materials Science and Engineering Shanghai University Shanghai 200444 China
2. Institutes of Physical Science and Information Technology Anhui University 111 Jiulong Road Hefei 230601 China
3. Minjiang Collaborative Center for Theoretical Physics College of Physics and Electronic Information Engineering Minjiang University 200 Xiyuangong Road Fuzhou 350108 China
4. Interdisciplinary Materials Research Center School of Materials Science and Engineering Tongji University Shanghai 201804 China
Abstract
AbstractTo improve thermoelectric efficiency, various tactics have been employed with considerable success to decouple intertwined material attributes. However, the integration of magnetism, derived from the unique spin characteristic that other methods cannot replicate, has been comparatively underexplored and presents an ongoing intellectual challenge. A previous research has shown that vacancy‐filling Heuslers offer a highly adaptable framework for modulating thermoelectric properties. Here, it is demonstrated how intrinsic magnetic‐electrical‐thermal coupling can enhance the thermoelectric performance of vacancy‐filling Heusler alloys. The materials, Nb0.75Ti0.25FeCrxSb with 0 ≤ x ≤ 0.1, feature a fraction of magnetic Cr ions that randomly occupy the vacancy sites of the Nb0.75Ti0.25FeSb half‐Heusler matrix. These alloys achieve a remarkable thermoelectric figure of merit (zT) of 1.21 at 973 K, owing to increased Seebeck coefficient and decreased thermal conductivity. The mechanism is primarily due to the introduction of magnetism, which increases the density‐of‐states effective mass (reaching levels up to 15 times that of a free electron's mass) and simultaneously reduces the electronic thermal conductivity. Mass and strain‐field fluctuations further reduce the lattice thermal conductivity. Even higher zT values can potentially be achieved by carefully balancing electron mobility and effective mass. This work underscores the substantial prospects for exploiting magnetic‐electrical‐thermal synergies in cutting‐edge thermoelectric materials.
Funder
National Key Research and Development Program of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation