Electrodeposition and characterization of nano-crystalline antimony telluride thin films
Chemistry of Materials
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Chemistry of Materials
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Nanoletters
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Acta Materialia
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Journal of Electronic Materials
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Applied Physics Letters
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Physical Review B
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Nanostructuring of thermoelectric materials is expected to enhance thermoelectric properties by reducing the thermal conductivity and improving the power factor from that of homogeneous bulk materials. In multiphase, nanostructured thermoelectric materials, an understanding of precipitation mechanisms and phase stability is crucial for engineering systems with optimal thermoelectric performance. In this presentation we will discuss our investigations of the morphological evolution, orientation relationship, and composition of Ag{sub 2}Te precipitates in PbTe using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and atom probe tomography (APT). Annealing in the region of two phase equilibrium between Ag{sub 2}Te and PbTe results in the formation of monoclinic {beta}-Ag{sub 2}Te precipitates as determined by x-ray and electron diffraction studies. These precipitates are aligned to the PbTe matrix with an orientation relationship that aligns the Te sub-lattices in the monoclinic and rock salt structures. This relationship is the same as we have reported earlier for {beta}-Ag{sub 2}Te precipitates in rocksalt AgSbTe{sub 2}. Observations using TEM and APT suggest that the Ag{sub 2}Te precipitates initially form as coherent spherical precipitates which upon coarsening evolve into flattened semi-coherent disks along the <100>PbTe directions which is consistent with theoretical predictions for elastically strained precipitates in a matrix. Our HRTEM observations show that sufficiently small precipitates are coherently embedded, while larger precipitates exhibit misfit dislocations and multiple monoclinic variants to relieve the elastic strain. Analysis of the composition of both precipitate groups using APT indicates that the larger precipitates exhibit compositions close to equilibrium while the smaller nanoscale precipitates exhibit enhanced Pb compositions. This detailed analysis of the orientation relationship, morphology, composition, and coarsening behavior of embedded Ag{sub 2}Te precipitates may be helpful in understanding the precipitation mechanisms and microstructure of related thermoelectric materials, such as LAST.
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Advanced Functional Materials
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The precipitation of Ag{sub 2}Te in a PbTe matrix is investigated using electron microscopy and atom probe tomography. We observe the formation of oriented nanoscale Ag{sub 2}Te precipitates in PbTe. These precipitates initially form as coherent spherical nanoparticles and evolve into flattened semi-coherent disks during coarsening. This change in morphology is consistent with equilibrium shape theory for coherently strained precipitates. Upon annealing at elevated temperatures these precipitates eventually revert to an equiaxed morphology. We suggest this shape change occurs once the precipitates grow beyond a critical size, making it favorable to relieve the elastic coherency strains by forming interfacial misfit dislocations. These investigations of the shape and coherency of Ag{sub 2}Te precipitates in PbTe should prove useful in the design of nanostructured thermoelectric materials.
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Acta Materialia
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Chalcogenide compounds based on the rocksalt and tetradymite structures possess good thermoelectric properties and are widely used in a variety of thermoelectric devices. Examples include PbTe and AgSbTe2, which have the rocksalt structure, and Bi2Te3, Bi2Se3, and Sb2Te3, which fall within the broad tetradymite-class of structures. These materials are also of interest for thermoelectric nanocomposites, where the aim is to improve thermoelectric energy conversion efficiency by harnessing interfacial scattering processes (e.g., reducing the thermal conductivity by phonon scattering or enhancing the Seebeck coefficient by energy filtering). Understanding the phase stability and microstructural evolution within such materials is key to designing processing approaches for optimal thermoelectric performance and to predicting the long-term nanostructural stability of the materials. In this presentation, we discuss our work investigating relationships between interfacial structure and formation mechanisms in several telluride-based thermoelectric materials. We begin with a discussion of interfacial coherency and its special aspects at interfaces in telluride compounds based on the rocksalt and tetradymite structures. We compare perfectly coherent interfaces, such as the Bi2Te3 (0001) twin, with semi-coherent, misfitting interfaces. We next discuss the formal crystallographic analysis of interfacial defects in these systems and then apply this methodology to high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) observations of interfaces in the AgSbTe2/Sb2Te3 and PbTe/Sb2Te3 systems, focusing on interfaces vicinal to {l_brace}111{r_brace}/{l_brace}0001{r_brace}. Through this analysis, we identify a defect that can accomplish the rocksalt-to-tetradymite phase transformation through diffusive-glide motion along the interface.
Nature Materials
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Chemistry of Materials
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Establishing the atomic structure and composition of interfaces in thermoelectric materials is important to understanding how these defects mediate thermal and electronic transport. Here, we discuss our experimental observations and theoretical calculations of the Bi{sub 2}Te{sub 3} (0001) basal twin in nanocrystalline Bi{sub 2}Te{sub 3}. This interface is important both because it is common in tetradymite-structured thermoelectric compounds and because it serves as a useful model system for more complex interfaces. Macroscopically, the (0001) twin corresponds to a 180 rotation of the crystal about the [0001] axis, which reverses the stacking of the basal planes. The basal planes of Bi{sub 2}Te{sub 3} are arranged in 5-plane groupings of alternating Bi and Te layers. Microscopically, one envisions three possible interface terminations: at the Te layer in the middle of the 5-layer packet, at a Bi layer, or at the Te-double layer at the junction of the 5-layer packet. Using aberration-corrected HAADF-STEM imaging, we have established that the twin boundary terminates at the Te-double layer. This result is consistent with ab initio calculations, which predict that the lowest energy for the three candidate structures is for this termination.
Interfaces are a critical determinant of the full range of materials properties, especially at the nanoscale. Computational and experimental methods developed a comprehensive understanding of nanograin evolution based on a fundamental understanding of internal interfaces in nanocrystalline nickel. It has recently been shown that nanocrystals with a bi-modal grain-size distribution possess a unique combination of high-strength, ductility and wear-resistance. We performed a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of the structure and motion of internal interfaces in nanograined metal and the resulting grain evolution. The properties of grain boundaries are computed for an unprecedented range of boundaries. The presence of roughening transitions in grain boundaries is explored and related to dramatic changes in boundary mobility. Experimental observations show that abnormal grain growth in nanograined materials is unlike conventional scale material in both the level of defects and the formation of unfavored phases. Molecular dynamics simulations address the origins of some of these phenomena.
Thermoelectric materials have many applications in the conversion of thermal energy to electrical power and in solid-state cooling. One route to improving thermoelectric energy conversion efficiency in bulk material is to embed nanoscale inclusions. This report summarize key results from a recently completed LDRD project exploring the science underpinning the formation and stability of nanostructures in bulk thermoelectric and the quantitative relationships between such structures and thermoelectric properties.
Journal of Materials Science
We analyze a thin (~1 nm) hexagonal-close-packed (HCP) intergranular layer at a 29°110 tilt grain boundary in gold. Our analysis, which is based on HRTEM observations and atomistic calculations, shows that this boundary consists of a dense array of 60°1/2 110 crystal lattice dislocations that are distributed one to every two {111} planes. These dislocations dissociate into paired Shockley partial dislocations, creating a stacking fault on every other plane and thereby producing the abab, or HCP, stacking sequence. This distribution of dislocations is consistent both with the measured intergranular misorientation and with the calculated rigid-body translation along the tilt axis. By establishing the interfacial dislocation arrangement, we also show how the HCP layer at the 29°boundary observed here is geometrically related to that found previously at the 80.6°∑ = 43 110 boundary. This result helps to link dislocation-based descriptions for boundary structures between the high- and low-angle misorientation regimes. © 2009 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
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Journal of Alloys and Compounds
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Acta Materialia
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Proposed for publication in Philosophical Magazine A.
Twinning is ubiquitous in electroplated metals. Here, we identify and discuss unique aspects of twinning found in electrodeposited Ni-Mn alloys. Previous reports concluded that the twin boundaries effectively refine the grain size, which enhances mechanical strength. Quantitative measurements from transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images show that the relative boundary length in the as-plated microstructure primarily comprises twin interfaces. Detailed TEM characterization reveals a range of length scales associated with twinning beginning with colonies ({approx}1000 nm) down to the width of individual twins, which is typically <50 nm. We also consider the connection between the crystallographic texture of the electrodeposit and the orientation of the twin planes with respect to the plating direction. The Ni-Mn alloy deposits in this work possess a 110-fiber texture. While twinning can occur on {l_brace}111{r_brace} planes either perpendicular or oblique to the plating direction in {l_brace}110{r_brace}-oriented grains, plan-view TEM images show that twins form primarily on those planes parallel to the plating direction. Therefore, grains enclosed by twins and multiply twinned particles are produced. Another important consequence of a high twin density is the formation of large numbers of twin-related junctions. We measure an area density of twin junctions that is comparable to the density of dislocations in a heavily cold-worked metal.