We study thermoelectric transport at low temperatures in correlated Kondo
insulators, motivated by the recent observation of a high thermoelectric figure
of merit(ZT) in FeSb2 at T∼10K. Even at room temperature,
correlations have the potential to lead to high ZT, as in YbAl3, one of the
most widely used thermoelectric metals. At low temperature correlation effects
are especially worthy of study because fixed band structures are unlikely to
give rise to the very small energy gaps Eg∼5kT necessary for a weakly
correlated material to function efficiently at low temperature. We explore the
possibility of improving the thermoelectric properties of correlated Kondo
insulators through tuning of crystal field and spin-orbit coupling and present
a framework to design more efficient low-temperature thermoelectrics based on
our results.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure