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Published May 14, 2014 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

TAGS-related indium compounds and their thermoelectric properties – the solid solution series (GeTe)_xAgIn_ySb_(1-y)Te_2 (x = 1–12; y = 0.5 and 1)

Abstract

Various members of the solid solution series (GeTe)_xAgIn_ySb_(1−y)Te_2 can be obtained by quenching high-temperature phases (x = 12 for y = 1 and x > 5 for y = 0.5). In contrast, high-temperature and high-pressure conditions (2.5 GPa, 350 °C) are required for the synthesis of members with In contents >3.6 atom% (such as x < 12 for y = 1 and x < 5 for y = 0.5) in order to avoid the formation of AgInTe_2. The latter exhibits tetrahedrally coordinated indium atoms under ambient conditions and therefore does not form mixed crystals with tellurides of germanium and antimony that are characterized by sixfold coordinated atom sites. Solid solutions with x ≤ 5 crystallize in rocksalt-type structures with octahedrally coordinated indium, whereas the ones with x > 5 adopt the α-GeTe structure type (3 + 3 coordination). Thus, in all samples investigated, 3 or 4 cations are disordered at one Wyckoff position. The quenched high-temperature or high-pressure phases, respectively, are almost homogeneous. Their powder X-ray diffraction patterns suggest pure phases; yet, high-resolution electron microscopy occasionally reveals a very small extent of nanoscopic precipitates as well as dislocations and twinning. (GeTe)_(5.5)AgIn_(0.5)Sb_(0.5)Te_2 shows a maximal ZT value of 0.75 even when (partial) decomposition into the TAGS material (GeTe)_(11)AgSbTe_2 and chalcopyrite-type AgInTe_2 has occurred at 300 °C. (GeTe)_(5.5)AgInTe_2 prepared under high-pressure conditions exhibits a ZT value of 0.6 at 125 °C, i.e. far below the decomposition temperature and thus is an interesting new low-temperature thermoelectric material.

Additional Information

© 2014 Royal Society of Chemistry. This Open Access Article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 3.0 Unported Licence. Received 5th January 2014 Accepted 6th February 2014. First published online 07 Feb 2014. We thank Christian Minke and Dr Markus Seibald for SEM operation and EDX analyses and Thomas Miller (LMU Munich) for the temperature-dependent powder diffraction experiments. Furthermore, we thank Fivos Drymiotis (California Institute of Technology) for help with the thermoelectric measurements and PD Dr Gerald Wagner (Leipzig University) for his help with the HRTEM interpretation. This investigation was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant OE530/1-2) and the Studienstifung des deutschen Volkes (scholarship for T.S.).

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