Quantitative Nanoscale Mapping of Three-Phase Thermal Conductivities in Filled Skutterudites via Scanning Thermal Microscopy
Ehsan Nasr Esfahani, Feiyue Ma, Shanyu Wang, Yun Ou, Jihui Yang, and, Jiangyu Li

TL;DR
This paper presents a method using scanning thermal microscopy to quantitatively map local thermal conductivities at the nanoscale in filled skutterudites, linking microstructure to thermoelectric performance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel technique combining scanning thermal microscopy and simulations to accurately measure local thermal conductivities in nanostructured thermoelectric materials.
Findings
High-resolution thermal conductivity maps correlate microstructure with local properties.
The method distinguishes thermal conductivities spanning multiple orders of magnitude.
It enables linking local properties to macroscopic thermoelectric performance.
Abstract
In the last two decades, a nanostructuring paradigm has been successfully applied in a wide range of thermoelectric materials, resulting in significant reduction in thermal conductivity and superior thermoelectric performance. These advances, however, have been accomplished without directly investigating the local thermoelectric properties, even though local electric current can be mapped with high spatial resolution. In fact, there still lacks an effective method that links the macroscopic thermoelectric performance to the local microstructures and properties. Here, we show that local thermal conductivity can be mapped quantitatively with good accuracy, nanometer resolution, and one-to-one correspondence to the microstructure using a three-phase skutterudite as a model system. Scanning thermal microscopy combined with finite element simulations demonstrate close correlation between…
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