Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Quantized thermoelectric Hall effect induces giant power factor in a topological semimetal

2020; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 11; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/s41467-020-19850-2

ISSN

2041-1723

Autores

Fei Han, Nina Andrejevic, Thanh Nguyen, Vladyslav Kozii, Quynh T. Nguyen, Tom Hogan, Zhiwei Ding, Ricardo Pablo‐Pedro, Shreya Parjan, Brian Skinner, Ahmet Alatas, Ercan Alp, Songxue Chi, J. A. Fernandez‐Baca, Shengxi Huang, Liang Fu, Mingda Li,

Tópico(s)

Advanced Thermoelectric Materials and Devices

Resumo

Abstract Thermoelectrics are promising by directly generating electricity from waste heat. However, (sub-)room-temperature thermoelectrics have been a long-standing challenge due to vanishing electronic entropy at low temperatures. Topological materials offer a new avenue for energy harvesting applications. Recent theories predicted that topological semimetals at the quantum limit can lead to a large, non-saturating thermopower and a quantized thermoelectric Hall conductivity approaching a universal value. Here, we experimentally demonstrate the non-saturating thermopower and quantized thermoelectric Hall effect in the topological Weyl semimetal (WSM) tantalum phosphide (TaP). An ultrahigh longitudinal thermopower $$S_{xx} \sim 1.1 \times 10^3 \, \mu \, {\mathrm{V}} \, {\mathrm{K}}^{ - 1}$$ S x x ~ 1.1 × 1 0 3 μ V K − 1 and giant power factor $$\sim 525 \, \mu \, {\mathrm{W}} \, {\mathrm{cm}}^{ - 1} \, {\mathrm{K}}^{ - 2}$$ ~ 525 μ W cm − 1 K − 2 are observed at ~40 K, which is largely attributed to the quantized thermoelectric Hall effect. Our work highlights the unique quantized thermoelectric Hall effect realized in a WSM toward low-temperature energy harvesting applications.

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