Abstract

Using the additive technologies in the production of nanoparticle-fabricated three-dimensional materials has become one of the most promising ways of obtaining effective and low-cost thermoelectric energy converters. Nanostructuring provides a route to modifying selectively the transport properties which determine the materials thermoelectric efficiency. In this paper, we have shown one more effect which consists in a significant dependence of the contribution of lattice vibrations to the thermal conductivity coefficient of a nanoparticle (its reducing is required in practice) on its morphology for nanoparticles of a pure substance. The particle morphology has been specified by the values of its effective diameter, fractal dimension and surface roughness.Using nanoparticles of pure bismuth at low temperatures as an example, we have demonstrated a notable decrease in the lattice thermal conductivity in “complicating” the particle morphology. In the final section, we have presented methods of calculating characteristics of nanoparticle ensembles, the methodology of measuring the fractal dimension experimentally also being discussed.

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