Doping
in a lattice refers to the introduction of very small quantities
of foreign atoms and has a generally small effect on decreasing the
lattice thermal conductivity, unlike alloying which involves large
fractions of other elements and strongly enhances point defect phonon
scattering. Here, we report that, by alloying only 3% of In on the
Cu sites of the diamond-like lattice of CuFeS2 chalcopyrite
compound (Cu1–x
In
x
FeS2, x = 0.03) has a disproportionally
large effect in reducing the lattice thermal conductivity of the compound
from 2.32 to 1.36 Wm–1K–1 at 630
K. We find that In is not fully ionized to +3 when on the Cu sublattice
and exists mainly in the +1 oxidation state. The 5s2 lone
pair of electrons of In+ makes this atom incompatible (referred
to as discordant) with the tetrahedral geometry of the crystallographic
site. This causes strong local bond distortions thereby softening
the In–S and Cu–S chemical bonds and introducing localized
low frequency vibrations. The latter couple with the base phonon frequencies
of the CuFeS2 matrix enhancing the anharmonicity and decreasing
the phonon velocity, and consequently the lattice thermal conductivity.
The control material in which the In doping is on the Fe3+ site of the structure at the same doping level (and found in the
site-compatible In3+ state), has a far smaller effect on
the phonon scattering.
Alloying CdTe in GeTe promotes the band convergence and intensifies phonon scattering due to the discordant nature of Cd in GeTe. Upon optimizing carrier concentration via Sb doping, we obtain a peak ZT of 1.8 at 700 K and a high average ZT of 1.3.
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