Cobaltites as perspective thermoelectrics

2005 ◽  
Vol 886 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiri Hejtmánek ◽  
Miroslav Veverka ◽  
Karel Knižek ◽  
Hiroyuki Fujishiro ◽  
Sylvie Hebert ◽  
...  

AbstractThe recent material research of mixed cobalt oxides is strongly motivated by the potential of some of them to be used as chemically stable high temperature thermoelectric material. This fact together with both the theoretical and experimental ambitions to fulfill the severe criteria needed for efficient thermoelectric conversion intensified both their theoretical and experimental research. Nonetheless, despite the investigations of the prototype materials represented by 3D perovskites Ln1−xAxCoO3 (Ln = La, Y, rare-earth, A = alkaline-earth) and 2D cobaltites of NaxCoO2 type, the concise physical background of their transport and magnetic properties remain still a matter of debate. This is likely due to a fact that cobalt ions can be stabilized either in low-spin state (diamagnetic for “pure” Co3+), with filled t2g levels and empty eg states, or magnetic ones, with filled eg states. As the energy difference between respective states is due to comparable strength of crystal field and Hund's energies rather small, the thermodynamically most stable ground-state, with eventually different character of charge carriers, can be critically influenced by an interplay of additional degrees of freedom - orbital and charge. The challenge for unequivocal theoretical model represents the thermoelectric power of mixed cobaltites where, up to now, somewhat ambiguous models based either on “classical” approach, associated with diffusion of itinerant charge carriers, or more exotic - based on configurational entropy of quasi-itinerant carriers - are often used for similar materials. Simultaneously, the open question remains the assessment of the dominant mechanism of phonon scattering in 2D cobaltites.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Micaela Matta ◽  
Alessandro Pezzella ◽  
Alessandro Troisi

<div><div><div><p>Eumelanins are a family of natural and synthetic pigments obtained by oxidative polymerization of their natural precursors: 5,6 dihydroxyindole and its 2-carboxy derivative (DHICA). The simultaneous presence of ionic and electronic charge carriers makes these pigments promising materials for applications in bioelectronics. In this computational study we build a structural model of DHICA melanin considering the interplay between its many degrees of freedom, then we examine the electronic structure of representative oligomers. We find that a non-vanishing dipole along the polymer chain sets this system apart from conventional polymer semiconductors, determining its electronic structure, reactivity toward oxidation and localization of the charge carriers. Our work sheds light on previously unnoticed features of DHICA melanin that not only fit well with its radical scavenging and photoprotective properties, but open new perspectives towards understanding and tuning charge transport in this class of materials.<br></p></div></div></div>


MRS Advances ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (64) ◽  
pp. 3419-3436 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. B. Meisenheimer ◽  
J. T. Heron

AbstractHistorically, the enthalpy is the criterion for oxide materials discovery and design. In this regime, highly controlled thin film epitaxy can be leveraged to manifest bulk and interfacial phases that are non-existent in bulk equilibrium phase diagrams. With the recent discovery of entropy-stabilized oxides, entropy and disorder engineering has been realized as an orthogonal approach. This has led to the nucleation and rapid growth of research on high-entropy oxides – multicomponent oxides where the configurational entropy is large but its contribution to its stabilization need not be significant or is currently unknown. From current research, it is clear that entropy enhances the chemical solubility of species and can realize new stereochemical configurations which has led to the rapid discovery of new phases and compositions. The research has expanded beyond studies to understand the role of entropy in stabilization and realization of new crystal structures to now include physical properties and the roles of local and global disorder. Here, key observations made regarding the dielectric and magnetic properties are reviewed. These materials have recently been observed to display concerted symmetry breaking, metal-insulator transitions, and magnetism, paving the way for engineering of these and potentially other functional phenomena. Excitingly, the disorder in these oxides allows for new interplay between spin, orbital, charge, and lattice degrees of freedom to design the physical behavior. We also provide a perspective on the state of the field and prospects for entropic oxide materials in applications considering their unique characteristics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamil Ur Rahman ◽  
Gul Rahman ◽  
Soonil Lee

Oxide thermoelectric materials are considered promising for high-temperature thermoelectric applications in terms of low cost, temperature stability, reversible reaction, and so on. Oxide materials have been intensively studied to suppress the defects and electronic charge carriers for many electronic device applications, but the studies with a high concentration of defects are limited. It desires to improve thermoelectric performance by enhancing its charge transport and lowering its lattice thermal conductivity. For this purpose, here, we modified the stoichiometry of cation and anion vacancies in two different systems to regulate the carrier concentration and explored their thermoelectric properties. Both cation and anion vacancies act as a donor of charge carriers and act as phonon scattering centers, decoupling the electrical conductivity and thermal conductivity.


Author(s):  
M. M. Glazov

Creation, detection, and manipulation of spin degrees of freedom of electrons and nuclei, phenomena of spin relaxation, decoherence and dephasing, and processes of spin transfer between different subsystems are among the most important problems studied in semiconductor spintronics. These effects are most pronounced in systems with localized charge carriers, such as semiconductor quantum dots. This chapter contains the motivation behind and a brief review of the material presented in the book. It also clarifies the logic of the presentation in further chapters. Chapter 1 may be helpful to readers willing to find appropriate material without going through the whole book, as it contains a concise overview of the other chapters.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Micaela Matta ◽  
Alessandro Pezzella ◽  
Alessandro Troisi

<div><div><div><p>Eumelanins are a family of natural and synthetic pigments obtained by oxidative polymerization of their natural precursors: 5,6 dihydroxyindole and its 2-carboxy derivative (DHICA). The simultaneous presence of ionic and electronic charge carriers makes these pigments promising materials for applications in bioelectronics. In this computational study we build a structural model of DHICA melanin considering the interplay between its many degrees of freedom, then we examine the electronic structure of representative oligomers. We find that a non-vanishing dipole along the polymer chain sets this system apart from conventional polymer semiconductors, determining its electronic structure, reactivity toward oxidation and localization of the charge carriers. Our work sheds light on previously unnoticed features of DHICA melanin that not only fit well with its radical scavenging and photoprotective properties, but open new perspectives towards understanding and tuning charge transport in this class of materials.<br></p></div></div></div>


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. Pushin ◽  
M. G. Huber ◽  
M. Arif ◽  
C. B. Shahi ◽  
J. Nsofini ◽  
...  

Neutron interferometry has proved to be a very precise technique for measuring the quantum mechanical phase of a neutron caused by a potential energy difference between two spatially separated neutron paths inside interferometer. The path length inside the interferometer can be many centimeters (and many centimeters apart) making it very practical to study a variety of samples, fields, potentials, and other macroscopic medium and quantum effects. The precision of neutron interferometry comes at a cost; neutron interferometers are very susceptible to environmental noise that is typically mitigated with large, active isolated enclosures. With recent advances in quantum information processing especially quantum error correction (QEC) codes we were able to demonstrate a neutron interferometer that is insensitive to vibrational noise. A facility at NIST’s Center for Neutron Research (NCNR) has just been commissioned with higher neutron flux than the NCNR’s older interferometer setup. This new facility is based on QEC neutron interferometer, thus improving the accessibility of neutron interferometry to the greater scientific community and expanding its applications to quantum computing, gravity, and material research.


1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (20) ◽  
pp. 2261-2264 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Kužel

The exponent r in the expression [Formula: see text], for the relaxation time due to optical phonon scattering, has been calculated for some of the transport coefficients. The variation of r with temperature is discussed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document