Hierarchically nanostructured thermoelectric materials: Challenges and opportunities for improved power factors
Neophytos Neophytou, Vassilios Vargiamidis, Samuel Foster, Patrizio, Graziosi, Laura de Sousa Oliveira, Dhritiman Chakraborty, Zhen Li, Mischa, Thesberg, Hans Kosina, Nick Bennett, Giovanni Pennelli, and Dario Narducci

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in hierarchical nanostructuring of thermoelectric materials, highlighting how it can simultaneously reduce thermal conductivity and enhance power factors for improved efficiency.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical overview of how hierarchical nanostructuring can be used to improve thermoelectric power factors alongside thermal conductivity reduction.
Findings
Hierarchical nanostructuring can significantly lower thermal conductivity.
Non-uniform nanostructures can enhance power factors.
Theoretical models suggest high power factors are achievable with nanostructuring.
Abstract
The field of thermoelectric materials has undergone a revolutionary transformation over the last couple of decades as a result of the ability to nanostructure and synthesize myriads of materials and their alloys. The ZT figure of merit, which quantifies the performance of a thermoelectric material has more than doubled after decades of inactivity, reaching values larger than two, consistently across materials and temperatures. Central to this ZT improvement is the drastic reduction in the material thermal conductivity due to the scattering of phonons on the numerous interfaces, boundaries, dislocations, point defects, phases, etc., which are purposely included. In these new generation of nanostructured materials, phonon scattering centers of different sizes and geometrical configurations (atomic, nano- and macro-scale) are formed, which are able to scatter phonons of mean-free-paths…
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