Thermoelectricity near Anderson localization transitions
Kaoru Yamamoto, Amnon Aharony, Ora Entin-Wohlman, Naomichi Hatano

TL;DR
This paper investigates thermoelectric properties near Anderson localization transitions, revealing universal behaviors, size dependencies, and effects of multiple localization edges on thermoelectric efficiency.
Contribution
It extends previous studies by providing universal approximants for critical exponents and analyzing size and multiple edge effects on thermoelectric coefficients.
Findings
Large Seebeck coefficient and efficiency on the insulating side at low temperatures.
Size-dependent behaviors of thermoelectric coefficients, with efficiency potentially increasing in small samples.
Significant enhancement of thermoelectric properties near multiple localization edges with increased disorder.
Abstract
The electronic thermoelectric coefficients are analyzed in the vicinity of one and two Anderson localization thresholds in three dimensions. For a single mobility edge, we correct and extend previous studies, and find universal approximants which allow to deduce the critical exponent for the zero-temperature conductivity from thermoelectric measurements. In particular, we find that at non-zero low temperatures the Seebeck coefficient and the thermoelectric efficiency can be very large on the "insulating" side, for chemical potentials below the (zero-temperature) localization threshold. Corrections to the leading power-law singularity in the zero-temperature conductivity are shown to introduce non-universal temperature-dependent corrections to the otherwise universal functions which describe the Seebeck coefficient, the figure of merit and the Wiedemann-Franz ratio. Next, the…
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