Thermoelectric Performance Enhancement in SnS Polycrystals Owing to Hole Doping Combined with Textured Microstructures.
AsfandiyarWenhua XueJun MaoKejia LiuQian ZhangJing-Feng LiPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Recently, the earth-abundant tin sulfide (SnS) has emerged as a promising thermoelectric material due to its phonon and electron structure similar to that of tin selenide (SnSe). However, compared with SnSe, limited progress has been achieved in the thermoelectric property enhancement of SnS. Textured SnS polycrystals with an enhanced thermoelectric performance have been developed in this work. The high carrier mobility benefited from the enhanced texture through the repressing strategy of spark plasma sintering, improving the electrical conductivity. In addition, Sn atom deficiencies in the texture sample led to an increased hole concentration, further boosting the electrical conductivity and power factor. The power factor exceeded 4.10 μW/cm·K 2 at 423 K and 5.50 μW/cm·K 2 at 850 K. The phonon scattering was strengthened by adjusting the multiscale microstructures including dislocations, defect clusters, etc., leading to an ultralow lattice thermal conductivity of 0.23 W/m·K at 850 K. A figure of merit zT > 1.3 at 850 K and an average zT ave of 0.58 in the temperature range 373-850 K were achieved in the SnS polycrystal.