Thermoelectric optimization and quantum-to-classical crossover in gate-controlled two-dimensional semiconducting nanojunctions
Yu-Chang Chen, Yu-Chen Chang

TL;DR
This study explores how gate-controlled 2D nanojunctions transition from quantum to classical electron transport, affecting thermoelectric efficiency, and identifies optimal conditions for high ZT in nanoscale devices.
Contribution
It demonstrates the gate, temperature, and length-dependent quantum-to-classical crossover in 2D nanojunctions and provides design principles for maximizing thermoelectric performance.
Findings
Maximum ZT > 2.3 achieved at 3 nm length and 500 K.
Quantum tunneling and thermionic emission coexist in short junctions.
Optimal thermoelectric performance occurs near the insulator-conductor transition.
Abstract
We investigate the thermoelectric performance of 2D nanojunctions with gate tunable architectures and varying channel lengths from 3 to 12 nm using a combination of first principles simulations, including density functional theory, DFT with nonequilibrium Greens function formalism (nanoDCAL), and nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations. Our study reveals a gate, temperature, and length dependent transition from quantum to classical in electron transport, transitioning from quantum tunneling in short junctions to thermionic emission in longer ones. We observe nontrivial dependencies of the thermoelectric figure of merit on the Seebeck coefficient, electrical conductivities, and thermal conductivities as a result of this crossover and gate controlling. We identify that maximizing ZT requires tuning the chemical potential just outside the band gap, where the system lies at the…
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