Abstract

Recent improvements in the efficiency of heat-to-electricity energy conversion in lead chalcogenide thermoelectrics involve reducing the thermal conductivity by incorporating large amounts of internal strain. The extent to which typical lead chalcogenide processing techniques (such as doping, ball milling, and densification) increase internal strain and dislocation density must be quantified to improve materials design. In this study, neutron powder diffraction is leveraged to evaluate the internal strain introduced by ball milling in doped and undoped powders. Doping with Na and/or Eu increases internal strain beyond ball milling alone, with the greatest increase from combining the two dopants. Strain recovery occurs in each powder above 400 K but can be suppressed by co-doping, indicating a strong dopant–dislocation interaction in this system. Therefore, high-temperature processing of PbTe powders should be avoided if high internal strain is desired. Low-temperature densification and/or rapid pressing techniques may be key to maintaining internal strain in the final pressed pellet. The diffraction peak asymmetry and correlated elastic softening measured in pressed PbTe pellets in past studies were not observed in the precursor powders measured here, suggesting that measurements of the Debye temperature on final pressed pellets are required to examine the influence of defect-induced elastic softening on thermal conductivity. This work provides key guidance for defect engineering to maximize internal strain and thermoelectric performance in PbTe thermoelectrics.

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