Journal of Materiomics (Mar 2021)
Thermoelectric transport properties in chalcogenides ZnX (X=S, Se): From the role of electron-phonon couplings
Abstract
Electron-phonon coupling (EPC) is a key factor for thermoelectric properties of materials. In this paper, the thermoelectric properties of zinc-blende chalcogenides (p-type) ZnS and ZnSe have been studied through full evaluation of EPC from first-principles, including the influences on both electrical and thermal transport. We find that the polar longitudinal optical phonon scattering is the dominant mechanism for electrical transport. Due to the triple degeneracy near the valence band maximum, the inter-band scattering also has detrimental contributions to the electrical conductivities. For phonon transport, it shows that the lattice thermal conductivity can be reduced by the electron-phonon scattering significantly at high carrier concentrations (e.g., at 300 K with 1021 cm−3 of hole, the reduction is ∼24.9% for ZnS and ∼28.4% for ZnSe, respectively). Finally, the p-type thermoelectric figure of merit (ZT) of two systems have been obtained, which are 0.129 for ZnS and 0.141 for ZnSe, at 700 K with their respective optimal hole concentrations. Our work provides a complete and in-depth study of thermoelectric properties in chalcogenides ZnX from the role of EPC. The results suggest EPC plays an important role on the thermoelectric properties and thus full evaluation of EPC is necessary especially for polar materials.