Efficiency in nanostructured thermionic and thermoelectric devices
M. F. O'Dwyer, T. E. Humphrey, R. A. Lewis, C. Zhang

TL;DR
This paper explores how engineering the electron energy spectrum shape in thermionic and thermoelectric devices can significantly enhance their efficiency, with total momentum filtering potentially reaching Carnot efficiency and transmission probability shaping offering power-efficient improvements.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of total momentum filtered thermionic devices and highlights the importance of transmission probability shape in optimizing device efficiency.
Findings
Total momentum filtered thermionic devices can reach Carnot efficiency.
Sharply rising transmission probabilities improve efficiency without reducing power.
Practical single and multibarrier devices can achieve the desired transmission probability shape.
Abstract
Advances in solid-state device design now allow the spectrum of transmitted electrons in thermionic and thermoelectric devices to be engineered in ways that were not previously possible. Here we show that the shape of the electron energy spectrum in these devices has a significant impact on their performance. We distinguish between traditional thermionic devices where electron momentum is filtered in the direction of transport only and a second type, in which the electron filtering occurs according to total electron momentum. Such 'total momentum filtered' kr thermionic devices could potentially be implemented in, for example, quantum dot superlattices. It is shown that whilst total momentum filtered thermionic devices may achieve efficiency equal to the Carnot value, traditional thermionic devices are limited to efficiency below this. Our second main result is that the electronic…
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