posted on 2017-02-08, 00:00authored byZhen Li, Sage R. Bauers, Nirakar Poudel, Danielle Hamann, Xiaoming Wang, David S. Choi, Keivan Esfarjani, Li Shi, David C. Johnson, Stephen B. Cronin
We
report cross-plane thermoelectric measurements of misfit layered compounds
(SnSe)n(TiSe2)n (n = 1,3,4,5), approximately 50
nm thick. Metal resistance thermometers are fabricated on the top
and bottom of the (SnSe)n(TiSe2)n material to measure the temperature
difference and heat transport through the material directly. By varying
the number of layers in a supercell, n, we vary the
interface density while maintaining a constant global stoichiometry.
The Seebeck coefficient measured across the (SnSe)n(TiSe2)n samples was
found to depend strongly on the number of layers in the supercell
(n). When n decreases from 5 to
1, the cross-plane Seebeck coefficient decreases from −31 to
−2.5 μV/K, while the cross-plane effective thermal conductivity
decreases by a factor of 2, due to increased interfacial phonon scattering.
The cross-plane Seebeck coefficients of the (SnSe)n(TiSe2)n are very different
from the in-plane Seebeck coefficients, which are higher in magnitude
and less sensitive to the number of layers in a supercell, n. We believe this difference is due to the different carrier
types in the n-SnSe and p-TiSe2 layers and the effect of
tunneling on the cross-plane transport.