250 research outputs found
High Thermoelectric Performance in PbSeāNaSbSe2 Alloys from Valence Band Convergence and Low Thermal Conductivity
PbSe is an attractive thermoelectric material due to its favorable electronic structure, high melting point, and lower cost compared to PbTe. Herein, the hitherto unexplored alloys of PbSe with NaSbSe2 (NaPbmSbSem+2) are described and the most promising pātype PbSeābased thermoelectrics are found among them. Surprisingly, it is observed that below 500 K, NaPbmSbSem+2 exhibits unorthodox semiconductingālike electrical conductivity, despite possessing degenerate carrier densities of ā1020 cmā3. It is shown that the peculiar behavior derives from carrier scattering by the grain boundaries. It is further demonstrated that the high solubility of NaSbSe2 in PbSe augments both the thermoelectric properties while maintaining a rock salt structure. Namely, density functional theory calculations and photoemission spectroscopy demonstrate that introduction of NaSbSe2 lowers the energy separation between the Lā and Ī£āvalence bands and enhances the power factors under 700 K. The crystallographic disorder of Na+, Pb2+, and Sb3+ moreover provides exceptionally strong point defect phonon scattering yielding low lattice thermal conductivities of 1ā0.55 W mā1 Kā1 between 400 and 873 K without nanostructures. As a consequence, NaPb10SbSe12 achieves maximum ZT ā1.4 near 900 K when optimally doped. More importantly, NaPb10SbSe12 maintains high ZT across a broad temperature range, giving an estimated record ZTavg of ā0.64 between 400 and 873 K, a significant improvement over existing pātype PbSe thermoelectrics.The high solubility of NaSbSe2 in PbSe is exploited to facilitate convergence of Lā and Ī£āvalence bands and to produce strong point defect phonon scattering. These processes yield enhanced power factors and low lattice thermal conductivity over ā300ā700 K, which together give NaPb10SbSe12 outstanding thermoelectric performance with a maximum ZT ā 1.4 at 873 K and ZTavg ā0.64 over 400ā873 K.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151353/1/aenm201901377.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151353/2/aenm201901377-sup-0001-S1.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151353/3/aenm201901377_am.pd
3D Printing & Open Access Databases for Crystallographic College Education
Presentation gives an overview of available open access databases of crystals and crystal structures, as well as discussions of how newly developed 3D printing technologies can be used to teach crystallography at the college level. Offers advice regarding conversion of crystallographic information files to 3D printing files, and shares news from the 3D printing of crystallographic models community
Crystallographic Education in the 21st Century
There are many methods that can be used to incorporate concepts of crystallography into the learning experiences of students, whether they are in elementary school, at university or part of the public at large. It is not always critical that those who teach crystallography have immediate access to diffraction equipment to be able to introduce the concepts of symmetry, packing or molecular structure in an age- and audience-appropriate manner. Crystallography can be used as a tool for teaching general chemistry concepts as well as general research techniques without ever having a student determine a crystal structure. Thus, methods for younger students to perform crystal growth experiments of simple inorganic salts, organic compounds and even metals are presented. For settings where crystallographic instrumentation is accessible (proximally or remotely), students can be involved in all steps of the process, from crystal growth, to data collection, through structure solution and refinement, to final publication. Several approaches based on the presentations in the MS92 Microsymposium at the IUCr 23rd Congress and General Assembly are reported. The topics cover methods for introducing crystallography to undergraduate students as part of a core chemistry curriculum; a successful short-course workshop intended to bootstrap researchers who rely on crystallography for their work; and efforts to bring crystallography to secondary school children and non-science majors. In addition to these workshops, demonstrations and long-format courses, open-format crystallographic databases and three-dimensional printed models as tools that can be used to excite target audiences and inspire them to pursue a deeper understanding of crystallography are described
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