Abstract

We have worked out conditions for the preparation of microcrystalline n-type lead telluride-based materials doped with lead iodide and investigated their microstructure and thermoelectric properties. The materials were prepared by hot-pressing powders produced by grinding an ingot to a particle size on the order of hundreds of microns in a planetary mill and to a particle size under hundreds of nanometers (mechanical activation) and by melt spinning. Fracture surfaces of the hot-pressed samples were examined on an optical and a scanning electron microscope. All of the samples had a nonuniform microstructure, with both small and larger grains present. In the samples prepared from the powders produced by mechanical activation, nanograins were detected. We have measured the Seebeck coefficient, electrical conductivity, and thermal conductivity of the samples at room temperature and in the range 300–800 K and evaluated their lattice thermal conductivity and thermoelectric figure of merit, ZT. Their lattice thermal conductivity was shown to decrease with decreasing grain size. The highest thermoelectric figure of merit, (ZT)max = 1.32 at 630 K, was offered by the materials produced from the mechanically activated powder.

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