22 research outputs found

    Effect of interface resistance on thermoelectric properties in (1-x)La0.95_{0.95}Sr0.05_{0.05}Co0.95_{0.95}Mn0.05_{0.05}O3_3/(x)WC composite

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    In this study, the synergistic effect of the particle size of the dispersed phase and the interface thermal resistance (Rint_{int}) between the phases on the phonon thermal conductivity (κph\kappa_{ph}) of the (1-x)La0.95_{0.95}Sr0.05_{0.05}Co0.95_{0.95}Mn0.05_{0.05}O3_3/(x)WC thermoelectric composite, is demonstrated. Further, the correlation between the Rint_{int} and the Kapitza radius is discussed using the Bruggeman's asymmetrical model. In particular, the polycrystalline La0.95_{0.95}Sr0.05_{0.05}Co0.95_{0.95}Mn0.05_{0.05}O3_3 sample is synthesized using a standard-solid state route. The presence of WC nanoparticle is confirmed from the electron microscopy images. Electrical conductivity (σ\sigma) increases, and the Seebeck coefficient (α\alpha) decreases with the increase in conducting WC volume fraction in the composite. The simultaneous increase in σ\sigma and a decrease in κph\kappa_{ph} with the WC volume fraction results in an increased figure of merit (zT) for (1-x)La0.95_{0.95}Sr0.05_{0.05}Co0.95_{0.95}Mn0.05_{0.05}O3_3/(x)WC composite. A maximum zT ∼\sim 0.20 is obtained for (1-x)La0.95_{0.95}Sr0.05_{0.05}Co0.95_{0.95}Mn0.05_{0.05}O3_3/(x)WC composite for x=0.010 at 463 K. The results obtained in the present study shows promise to design thermoelectric composites with desired phonon thermal conductivity considering the elastic properties between the phases.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl

    Effective Thermal Conductivity of SrBi4_4Ti4_4O15_{15}-La0.7_{0.7}Sr0.3_{0.3}MnO3_3 Oxide composite: Role of Particle Size and Interface Thermal Resistance

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    We present a novel approach to reduce the thermal conductivity (κ\kappa) in thermoelectric composite materials using acoustic impedance mismatch and the Debye model. Also, the correlation between interface thermal resistance (Rint_{int}) and the particle size of the dispersed phase on the k of the composite is discussed. In particular, the κ\kappa of an oxide composite which consists of a natural superlattice Aurivillius phase (SrBi4_4Ti4_4O15_{15}) as a matrix and perovskite (La0.7_{0.7}Sr0.3_{0.3}MnO3_3) as a dispersed phase is investigated. A significant reduction in the κ\kappa of composite, even lower than the κ\kappa of the matrix when the particle size of La0.7_{0.7}Sr0.3_{0.3}MnO3_3 is smaller than the Kapitza radius (aK_K) is observed, depicting that Rint_{int} dominates for particle size lower than aK_K due to increased surface to volume ratio. The obtained results have the potential to provide new directions for engineering composite thermoelectric systems with desired thermal conductivity and promising in the field of energy harvesting.Comment: 21 pages, 8 Figures, 5 Table

    Discovery of the high thermoelectric performance in low-cost Cu8SiSxSe6-x argyrodites

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    Cu-based argyrodites have gained much attention as a new class of thermoelectric materials for energy harvesting. However, the phase transition occurring in these materials and low energy conversion performance limited their broad application in thermoelectric converters. In this work, we disclose a newly discovered highly efficient Cu8SiSxSe6-x argyrodite with stabilized high-symmetry cubic phase at above 282 K opening the practical potential of this material for the mid-temperature region applications. The temperature range broadening of the high-symmetry phase existence was possible due to the successful substitution of Se with S in Cu8SiSxSe6-x, which enhances the configurational entropy. The developed argyrodites show excellent thermoelectric performance thanks to the increased density of states effective mass and ultralow lattice thermal conductivity. Further tuning of the carrier concentration through the Cu-deviation improves the thermoelectric performance significantly. The dimensionless thermoelectric figure of merit ZT and estimated energy conversion efficiency {\eta} for Cu7.95SiS3Se3 achieve outstanding values of the 1.45 and 13 %, respectively, offering this argyrodite as a low-cost and Te-free alternative for the thermoelectric energy conversion applications.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figure

    Quantum-centric Supercomputing for Materials Science: A Perspective on Challenges and Future Directions

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    Computational models are an essential tool for the design, characterization, and discovery of novel materials. Hard computational tasks in materials science stretch the limits of existing high-performance supercomputing centers, consuming much of their simulation, analysis, and data resources. Quantum computing, on the other hand, is an emerging technology with the potential to accelerate many of the computational tasks needed for materials science. In order to do that, the quantum technology must interact with conventional high-performance computing in several ways: approximate results validation, identification of hard problems, and synergies in quantum-centric supercomputing. In this paper, we provide a perspective on how quantum-centric supercomputing can help address critical computational problems in materials science, the challenges to face in order to solve representative use cases, and new suggested directions.Comment: 60 pages, 14 figures; comments welcom
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