posted on 2025-01-25, 04:30authored bySaff E. Awal Akhtar, Neophytos Neophytou
Band alignment (or
band convergence) is a strategy suggested
to
provide improvements in the thermoelectric power factor (PF) of materials
with complex bandstructures. The addition of more bands at the energy
region that contributes to transport can provide more conducting paths
and could improve the electrical conductivity and PF of a material.
However, this can lead to increased intervalley scattering, which
will tend to degrade the conductivity. Using the Boltzmann transport
equation (BTE) and a multiband model, we theoretically investigate
the conditions under which band alignment can improve the PF. We show
that PF improvements are realized when intraband scattering between
the aligned bands dominates over interband scattering, with larger
improvements reached when a light band is brought into alignment.
In the more realistic scenario of intra- and interband scattering
coexistence, we show that in the light band alignment case, possibilities
of PF improvement are present even down to the level where the intra-
and interband scattering are of similar strength. For heavy band alignment,
this tolerance is weaker, and weaker interband scattering is necessary
to realize PF improvements. On the other hand, when interband scattering
dominates, it is not possible to realize any PF improvements upon
band alignment, irrespective of bringing a light or a heavy band into
alignment. Overall, to realize PF improvements upon band alignment,
the valleys that are brought into alignment need to be as electrically
conducting as possible compared to the lower energy base valleys and
interact as little as possible with those.