Enhanced Figure of Merit in Bismuth-Antimony Fine-Grained Alloys at Cryogenic Temperatures
Sheng Gao, John Gaskins, Xixiao Hu, Kathleen Tomko, Patrick Hopkins,, S. Joseph Poon

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a significant enhancement in the thermoelectric figure of merit (ZT) of bismuth-antimony alloys at cryogenic temperatures, achieved through microstructural control and magnetic effects, promising improved cooling applications.
Contribution
The paper reports the first observation of a record high ZT of 0.6 in melt-spun Bi-Sb alloys at cryogenic temperatures, with insights into microstructure and magneto-thermoelectric effects.
Findings
Achieved ZT of 0.6 near 100-150K in Bi-Sb alloys.
Record low thermal conductivity of ~1.5 W/m·K at 100K.
Magneto-thermoelectric effects further increased ZT to about 0.7.
Abstract
Thermoelectric (TE) materials research plays a vital role in heat-to-electrical energy conversion and refrigeration applications. Bismuth-antimony (Bi-Sb) alloy is a promising material for thermoelectric cooling. Herein, a high figure of merit, ZT, near 0.6 at cryogenic temperatures (100-150K) has been achieved in melt-spun n-type Bi85Sb15 bulk samples consisting of micron-size grains. The achieved ZT is nearly 50 percents higher than polycrystalline averaged single crystal ZT of ~0.4, and it is also significantly higher than ZT of less than ~0.3 measured below 150K in Bi-Te alloys commonly used for cryogenic cooling applications. The improved thermoelectric properties can be attributed to the fine-grained microstructure achieved from rapid solidification, which not only significantly reduced the thermal conductivity but also mitigated a segregation effect. A record low thermal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermoelectric Materials and Devices · Thermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Thermal properties of materials
