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Plasticity in single-crystalline Mg 3 Bi 2 thermoelectric material.

Peng ZhaoWenhua XueYue ZhangShizhen ZhiXiaojing MaJiamin QiuTianyu ZhangSheng YeHuimin MuJinxuan ChengXiaodong WangShuaihang HouLijia ZhaoGuoqiang XieFeng CaoXingjun LiuJun MaoYuhao FuYumei WangQian Zhang
Published in: Nature (2024)
Most of the state-of-the-art thermoelectric materials are inorganic semiconductors. Owing to the directional covalent bonding, they usually show limited plasticity at room temperature 1,2 , for example, with a tensile strain of less than five per cent. Here we discover that single-crystalline Mg 3 Bi 2 shows a room-temperature tensile strain of up to 100 per cent when the tension is applied along the (0001) plane (that is, the ab plane). Such a value is at least one order of magnitude higher than that of traditional thermoelectric materials and outperforms many metals that crystallize in a similar structure. Experimentally, slip bands and dislocations are identified in the deformed Mg 3 Bi 2 , indicating the gliding of dislocations as the microscopic mechanism of plastic deformation. Analysis of chemical bonding reveals multiple planes with low slipping barrier energy, suggesting the existence of several slip systems in Mg 3 Bi 2 . In addition, continuous dynamic bonding during the slipping process prevents the cleavage of the atomic plane, thus sustaining a large plastic deformation. Importantly, the tellurium-doped single-crystalline Mg 3 Bi 2 shows a power factor of about 55 microwatts per centimetre per kelvin squared and a figure of merit of about 0.65 at room temperature along the ab plane, which outperforms the existing ductile thermoelectric materials 3,4 .
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