Crystallographic Control
at the Nanoscale To Enhance
Functionality: Polytypic Cu<sub>2</sub>GeSe<sub>3</sub> Nanoparticles
as Thermoelectric Materials
- Publication date
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Abstract
The potential to control the composition and crystal
phase at the
nanometer scale enable the production of nanocrystalline materials
with enhanced functionalities and new applications. In the present
work, we detail a novel colloidal synthesis route to prepare nanoparticles
of the ternary semiconductor Cu<sub>2</sub>GeSe<sub>3</sub> (CGSe)
with nanometer-scale control over their crystal phases. We also demonstrate
the structural effect on the thermoelectric properties of bottom-up-prepared
CGSe nanomaterials. By careful adjustment of the nucleation and growth
temperatures, pure orthorhombic CGSe nanoparticles with cationic order
or polytypic CGSe nanoparticles with disordered cation positions can
be produced. In this second type of nanoparticle, a high density of
twins can be created to periodically change the atomic plane stacking,
forming a hexagonal wurtzite CGSe phase. The high yield of the synthetic
routes reported here allows the production of single-phase and multiphase
CGSe nanoparticles in the gram scale, which permits characterization
of the thermoelectric properties of these materials. Reduced thermal
conductivities and a related 2.5-fold increase of the thermoelectric
figure of merit for multiphase nanomaterials compared to pure-phase
CGSe are systematically obtained. These results are discussed in terms
of the density and efficiency of phonon scattering centers in both
types of materials