Abstract

Thermoelectric materials have drawn much attention over the last two decades due to the increase in global energy demand. However, designing efficient thermoelectrics reveals itself as a tough task for their properties (Seebeck coefficient, electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity) are mutually opposed. Hence, most recently, new design approaches have appeared, among which high-throughput methods have been implemented either experimentally or computationally. In this work, a high-throughput computer program has been designed to generate over 4000 structures based on a small set of complex layered chalcogenide compounds taken from the mAIVBVI nA2VB3VI homologous series, where AIV is Ge, AV is Sb and BVI is Te. The computer-generated structures have been investigated using density-functional theory methods, and the electronic and transport properties have been calculated. It has been found, using the quantum theory of atoms in molecules and crystals, that a wide variety of bond types constitutes the bonding network of the structures. All the structures are found to have negative formation energies. Among the obtained final structures, 43 are found with a wide band gap energy (>0.25 eV), 358 with semi-conductor/metal characteristics, and 731 with metallic characteristics. The transport properties calculations, using the Boltzmann equation, reveal that two p-type and 86 n-type structures are potentially promising compounds for thermoelectric applications.

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