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Self-Assembled Three-Dimensional Bi2Te3 Nanowire-PEDOT:PSS Hybrid Nanofilm Network for Ubiquitous Thermoelectrics.

Warittha ThongkhamCharoenporn LertsatitthanakornKanpitcha JiramitmongkonKittipong TantisantisomThitikorn BoonkoomManit JitpukdeeKitiphat SinthiptharakoonAnnop KlamchuenMonrudee LiangruksaPaisan Khanchaitit
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Thermoelectric generation capable of delivering reliable performance in the low-temperature range (<150 °C) for large-scale deployment has been a challenge mainly due to limited properties of thermoelectric materials. However, realizing interdependence of topological insulators and thermoelectricity, a new research dimension on tailoring and using the topological-insulator boundary states for thermoelectric enhancement has emerged. Here, we demonstrate a promising hybrid nanowire of topological bismuth telluride (Bi2Te3) within the conductive poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):polystyrenesulfonate (PEDOT:PSS) matrix using the in situ one-pot synthesis to be incorporated into a three-dimensional network of self-assembled hybrid thermoelectric nanofilms for the scalable thermoelectric application. Significantly, the nanowire-incorporated film network exhibits simultaneous increase in electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficient as opposed to reduced thermal conductivity, improving thermoelectric performance. Based on comprehensive measurements for electronic transport of individual nanowires revealing an interfacial conduction path along the Bi2Te3 core inside the encapsulating layer and that the hybrid nanowire is n-type semiconducting, the enhanced thermoelectricity is ascribed to increased hole mobility due to electron transfer from Bi2Te3 to PEDOT:PSS and importantly charge transport via the Bi2Te3-PEDOT:PSS interface. Scaling up the nanostructured material to construct a thermoelectric generator having the generic pipeline-insulator geometry, the device exhibits a power factor and a figure of merit of 7.45 μW m-1 K-2 and 0.048, respectively, with an unprecedented output power of 130 μW and 15 day operational stability at Δ T = 60 °C. Our findings not only encourage a new approach to cost-effective thermoelectric generation, but they could also provide a route for the enhancement of other applications based on the topological nanowire.
Keyphrases
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  • reduced graphene oxide
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