The Influence of Carbon Nanotubes on the Thermoelectric Properties of Bismuth Telluride
Abstract
Thermoelectric materials are devices that have the ability to convert waste heat to
electricity. The widespread use of thermoelectric materials is currently limited by the low
value of their figure-of-merit (ZT). Bismuth Telluride (Bi2Te3) is a promising
thermoelectric material in the near room temperature applications that provides a ZT value
~ 1. In order to overcome the limitation of utilizing thermoelectric materials in waste heat
recovery, a ZT value > 2 is required. In this current study, multi-walled carbon nanotubes
(MWCNT) were incorporated into the Bi2Te3 bulk matrix system to enhance its mechanical
and thermoelectric properties through powder processing techniques. The nanocrystalline
Bi2Te3/MWCNT composites were prepared using high energy ball milling and spark
plasma sintering (SPS) techniques. The structural characterization and the average grain
size values of both pristine Bi2Te3 and Bi2Te3/MWCNT were found to be approximately
(~ 13 nm), and the average strain was found to be 0.2 using both X-ray Diffraction (XRD)
and Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques. Vickers Microhardness test
shows significant improvement of the nanocomposite hardness up to ~2 GPa as a function
of increasing the MWCNT content. As for the dimensionless figure of merit (ZT) of the composite, it is expected to increase above the value of the pure binary Bi2Te3 in the
temperature range of 298–498 K the addition of MWCNT increased the ZT value from
0.48 to maximum ZT value to 0.61 at 50oC, while at 150oC the ZT value was measured to
be 0.35 and 0.43 for Bi2Te3 and MWCNT/Bi2Te3, respectively. It is considered that the
enhancement of the thermoelectric performance of the composite mostly derived from the
thermal conductivity, which is reduced by an active phonon-scattering at the
MWCNT/Bi2Te3 interfaces
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/15318Collections
- Materials Science & Technology [59 items ]