Developing new thermoelectric materials with high performance can broaden the thermoelectric family and is the key to fulfill extreme condition applications. In this work, we proposed two new high-temperature thermoelectric materials—MgV2O5 and CaV2O5—which are derived from the interface engineered V2O5. The electronic and thermoelectric properties of V2O5, MgV2O5, and CaV2O5 were calculated based on first principles and Boltzmann semi-classical transport equations. It was found that although V2O5 possessed a large Seebeck coefficient, its large band gap strongly limited the electrical conductivity, hence hindering it from being good thermoelectric material. With the intercalation of Mg and Ca atoms into the van der Waals interfaces of V2O5, i.e., forming MgV2O5 and CaV2O5, the electronic band gaps could be dramatically reduced down to below 0.1 eV, which is beneficial for electrical conductivity. In MgV2O5 and CaV2O5, the Seebeck coefficient was not largely affected compared to V2O5. Consequently, the thermoelectric figure of merit was expected to be improved noticeably. Moreover, the intercalation of Mg and Ca atoms into the V2O5 van der Waals interfaces enhanced the anisotropic transport and thus provided a possible way for further engineering of their thermoelectric performance by nanostructuring. Our work provided theoretical guidelines for the improvement of thermoelectric performance in layered oxide materials.
Heat carriers in amorphous organic materials can be categorized into low frequency propagon and high frequency diffuson, which can partly convert to each other with the variation of pressure.
The crystal habit can have a profound influence on the physical properties of crystalline materials, and thus controlling the crystal morphology is of great practical relevance across many industries. Herein, this work investigates the effect of polymer additives on the crystal habit of metformin HCl with both experiments and computational methods with the aim of developing a combined screening approach for crystal morphology engineering. Crystallization experiments of metformin HCl are conducted in methanol and in an isopropanol-water mixture (8:2 V/V). Polyethylene glycol, polyvinylpyrrolidone, Tween80, and hydroxypropyl methylcellulose polymer additives are used in low concentrations (1-2% w/w) in the experiments to study the effect they have on modifying the crystal habit. Additionally, this work has developed computational methods to characterize the morphology "landscape" and quantifies the overall effect of solvent and additives on the predicted crystal habits. Further analysis of the molecular dynamics simulations is used to rationalize the effect of additives on specific crystal faces. This work demonstrates that the effects of additives on the crystal habit are a result of their absorption and interactions with the slow growing {100} and {020} faces.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.