Anisotropic Thermoelectric Devices Made from Single-Crystal Semimetal Microwires in Glass Coating
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KONOPKO, Leonid, NIKOLAEVA, Albina, KOBYLIANSKAYA, A.K., HUBER, Tito. Anisotropic Thermoelectric Devices Made from Single-Crystal Semimetal Microwires in Glass Coating. In: Journal of Electronic Materials, 2018, nr. 6(47), pp. 3171-3176. ISSN 0361-5235.
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Journal of Electronic Materials
Numărul 6(47) / 2018 / ISSN 0361-5235 /ISSNe 1543-186X

Anisotropic Thermoelectric Devices Made from Single-Crystal Semimetal Microwires in Glass Coating


Pag. 3171-3176

Konopko Leonid1, Nikolaeva Albina1, Kobylianskaya A.K.1, Huber Tito2
 
1 Institute of the Electronic Engineering and Nanotechnologies "D. Ghitu" of the Academy of Sciences of Moldova,
2 Howard University
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 19 iunie 2018


Rezumat

Thermoelectric heat conversion based on the Seebeck and Peltier effects generated at the junction between two materials of type-n and type-p is well known. Here, we present a demonstration of an unconventional thermoelectric energy conversion that is based on a single element made of an anisotropic material. In such materials, a heat flow generates a transverse thermoelectric electric field lying across the heat flow. Potentially, in applications involving miniature devices, the anisotropic thermoelectric (AT) effect has the advantage over traditional thermoelectrics that it simplifies the thermoelectric generator architecture. This is because the generator can be made of a single thermoelectric material without the complexity of a series of contacts forming a pile. A feature of anisotropic thermoelectrics is that the thermoelectric voltage is proportional to the element length and inversely proportional to the effective thickness. The AT effect has been demonstrated with artificial anisotropic thin film consisting of layers of alternating thermoelectric type, but there has been no demonstration of this effect in a long single-crystal. Electronic transport measurements have shown that the semimetal bismuth is highly anisotropic. We have prepared an experimental sample consisting of a 10-m-long glass-insulated single-crystal tin-doped bismuth microwire (d = 4 μm). Crucial for this experiment is the ability to grow the microwire as a single-crystal using a technique of recrystallization with laser heating and under a strong electric field. The sample was wound as a spiral, bonded to a copper disk, and used in various experiments. The sensitivity of the sample to heat flow is as high as 10−2 V/W with a time constant τ of about 0.5 s.

Cuvinte-cheie
anisotropic thermoelement, Bismuth, flat spiral, Thermoelectric device,

glass-insulated single-crystal microwire