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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Synthetic and structural aspects of Group 13 and 15 element chemistry

Pickett, Nigel Leroy January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
2

Solidification of undercooled bismuth-antimony alloys

Pinnow, Wayne Robert. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1982. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 147-149).
3

Synthetic and structural studies involving the heavier elements of groups 13 and 15

Carmalt, Claire Jane January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
4

Quantum-size-effect studies in bismuth and antimony /

Lee, Boon-ying, January 1978 (has links)
Ph. D. thesis, University of Hong Kong, 1979.
5

Thermoelectric Properties of P-Type Nanostructured Bismuth Antimony Tellurium Alloyed Materials

Ma, Yi January 2009
Thesis advisor: Zhifeng Ren / Solid-state cooling and power generation based on thermoelectric effects are attractive for a wide range of applications in power generation, waste heat recovery, air-conditioning, and refrigeration. There have been persistent efforts on improving the figure of merit (ZT) since the 1950's; only incremental gains were achieved in increasing ZT, with the (Bi1-xSbx)2(Se1-yTey)3 alloy family remaining the best commercial material with ZT ~ 1. To improve ZT to a higher value, we have been pursuing an approach based on random nanostructures and the idea that the thermal conductivity reduction that is responsible for ZT enhancement in superlattices structures can be realized in such nanostructures. The synthesis and characterization of various nanopowders prepared by wet chemical as well as high energy ball milling methods will be discussed in this dissertation. The solid dense samples from nanopowders were prepared by direct current induced hot press (DC hot press) technique. The thermoelectric properties of the hot pressed samples have been studied in detail. By ball milling ingots of bulk alloy crystals and hot pressing the nanopowders, we had demonstrated a high figure-of-merit in nanostructured bulk bismuth antimony telluride. In this dissertation, we use the same ball milling and hot press technique, but start with elemental chunks of bismuth, antimony, and tellurium to avoid the ingot formation step. We show that a peak ZT of about 1.3 can be achieved. Our material also exhibits a ZT of 0.7 at 250 °C, close to the value reached when ingot was used. This process is more economical and environmentally friendly than starting from bulk alloy crystals. The ZT improvement is caused mostly by the low thermal conductivity, similar to the case using ingot. Transmission electron microscopy observations of the microstructures suggest that the lower thermal conductivity is mainly due to the increased phonon scattering from the high density grain boundaries and defects. The performance of thermoelectric materials is determined by its dimensionless figure-of-merit (ZT) which needs to be optimized within a specific temperature range for a desired device performance. Hence, we show that by varying the Bi/Sb ratio, the peak ZT can be shifted to a higher or lower temperature for power generation applications or a cooling mode operation. A peak ZT of about 1.3 is achieved from a Bi0.4Sb1.6Te3 composition which is highest among the different compositions. These nanostructured bulk samples have a significantly low lattice thermal conductivity compared to the bulk samples due to the increased phonon scattering in the grain boundaries and defects. This study shows that Bi0.5Sb1.5Te3 may potentially perform better for cooling devices, while Bi0.3Sb1.7Te3 should be able to show better power generation efficiency. Several issues related to accurate measurement of thermoelectric properties were identified and many of them were solved during my studies and these are discussed in this thesis. With the data we obtained, it is clear that nanopowder-based thermoelectric materials hold significant promise. Therefore, a review of synthesis of nanostructured materials by solution-based methods, including a hydrothermal process for the Bi2Te3, Bi2Se3, and Bi2Te2.25Se0.75 nanoparticles, a solvothermal route for Sb2Te3 nanostructures, and a polyol process for the preparation of Bi nanostructures is presented in this dissertation. These new nanostructures may find applications in enhancing the thermoelectric performance. Although small sized and well dispersed nanopowders of various thermoelectric materials could be prepared by a solution method in large scale, contamination and partial oxidation are always big challenges in a chemical approach. Hence, a high energy ball milling technique to prepare thermoelectric nanopowders in large scale and without major contamination is still found to be more efficient and preferred. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2009. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Physics.
6

Spin dynamics of complex oxides, bismuth-antimony alloys, and bismuth chalcogenides

Sahin, Cuneyt 01 July 2015 (has links)
The emerging field of spintronics relies on the manipulation of electron spin in order to use it in spin-based electronics. Such a paradigm change has to tackle several challenges including finding materials with sufficiently long spin lifetimes and materials which are efficient in generating pure spin currents. This thesis predicts that two types of material families could be a solution to the aforementioned challenges: complex oxides and bismuth based materials. We derived a general approach for constructing an effective spin-orbit Hamiltonian which is applicable to all nonmagnetic materials. This formalism is useful for calculating spin-dependent properties near an arbitrary point in momentum space. We also verified this formalism through comparisons with other approaches for III-V semiconductors, and its general applicability is illustrated by deriving the spin-orbit interaction and predicting spin lifetimes for strained SrTiO3 and a two-dimensional electron gas in SrTiO3 (such as at the LaAIO3/SrTiO3 interface). Our results suggest robust spin coherence and spin transport properties in SrTiO3 related materials even at room temperature. In the second part of the study we calculated intrinsic spin Hall conductivities for bismuth-antimony Bi1-xSbx semimetals with strong spin-orbit couplings, from the Kubo formula and using Berry curvatures evaluated throughout the Brillouin zone from a tight-binding Hamiltonian. Nearly crossing bands with strong spin-orbit interaction generate giant spin Hall conductivities in these materials, ranging from 474 ((ћ/e)Ω-1cm-1) for bismuth to 96((ћ/e)Ω-1cm-1) for antimony; the value for bismuth is more than twice that of platinum. The large spin Hall conductivities persist for alloy compositions corresponding to a three-dimensional topological insulator state, such as Bi0.83Sb0.17. The spin Hall conductivity could be changed by a factor of 5 for doped Bi, or for Bi0.83Sb0.17, by changing the chemical potential by 0.5 eV, suggesting the potential for doping or voltage tuned spin Hall current. We have also calculated intrinsic spin Hall conductivities of Bi2Se3 and Bi2Te3 topological insulators from an effective tight-binding Hamiltonian including two nearest-neighbor interactions. We showed that both materials exhibit giant spin Hall conductivities calculated from the Kubo formula in linear response theory and the clean static limit. We conclude that bismuth-antimony alloys and bismuth chalcogenides are primary candidates for efficiently generating spin currents through the spin Hall effect.
7

Synthesis and Property Characterization of Novel Ternary Semiconductor Nanomaterials

Mao, Baodong 26 June 2012 (has links)
No description available.
8

Microstructure Design And Interfacial Effects On Thermoelectric Properties Of Bi-Sb-Te System

Femi, Olu Emmanuel 06 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Climate change is a subject of deep distress in today’s world. Over dependence on hydrocarbon has resulted in serious environmental problems. Rising sea level, global warming and ozone layer depletion are the mainstream of any discuss world over. The collective goal of cutting carbon emission by the year 2020has prompted the search for clean, alternative energy sources. This effort are already yielding good reward as other forms of energy such as solar, wind, nuclear and hydro have received huge investment and renew interest over the past decade. Thermoelectric materials over the past decades have been tipped to replace conventional means of power generations as these materials have the ability to convert heat to electrical energy and vice versa. They are simple, have no moving parts and use no greenhouse gases. But the major drawback of these materials is their low conversion efficiency. Hence there is a need to enhance the efficiency of thermoelectric material to fulfill their undeniable potentials. A parameter called the thermoelectric figure of merit, ZT defines the efficiency of a thermoelectric material. ZT relates three non-mutually exclusive transport properties namely Seebeck coefficient, electrical conductivity and thermal conductivity. Efficient thermoelectric material should possess high Seebeck coefficient, high electrical conductivity and low thermal conductivity. Hence, one of the interesting ideas in the area of thermoelectric research is the concept of designing a bulk material with high density of phonon scattering centers so has to reduce the lattice contribution to thermal conductivity but at the same time have minimum impact oncharge carriers. This is usually achieved by utilizing interphase and grain boundaries which are localized defects to scatter phonons. The volume fraction of the grain/interphase boundaries can be control through phase modification and microstructure design. This thesis is centered on Bi-Sb-Te systems which are the present room temperature state of the earth thermoelectric material. The investigation revolves around developing a new kind of microstructure in the well-studied Bi-Sb-Te system that shows tremendous potential as a means to reduce lattice contribution to thermal conductivity. The idea of having both p and n-type thermoelectric material preferably from the same material was also a motivation in our investigation. The thesis isdivided into six chapters. The first chapter introduces the concept of thermoelectricity i.e. the direct conversion of thermal energy into electricity. The physics involved and contribution of individual to the science of thermoelectricity were enumerated. Efficiency, optimization and material selection for better thermoelectric performance were briefly enumerated. Prospective materials that are currently been investigated for better thermoelectric properties were also mentioned. The structure of the Bi-Sb-Te system which is the focus of this thesis is present in this chapter including doping effect on the thermoelectric performance of the system as well as the various methods present been employed to improve the thermoelectric properties of the system. Finally the chapter enumerates the scope and object of the present thesis. The different experimental procedures adopted in the present thesis arediscussed in chapter 2. The details of different processing routes followed to synthesize flame-melted ingots, flame-melted + low temperature milled (cryo milling) + spark plasma sintering (SPS) alloy and flame-melted + melt spinning + spark plasma sintering (SPS) alloy, are discussed followed by the various structural and functional characterization techniques. The unique advantage of the spark plasma sintering techniques over the conventional sintering method was talked out in detail. The structural characterizations performed on the synthesized alloys include XRD, SEM and whilethe functional characterizations comprised of Hall measurement, Seebeck coefficient, electrical resistivity and thermal conductivity measurements. Thermoelectric properties of selected composition of Bi-Sb-Te synthesized via flame-melting are presented in chapter 3.Detail study of four analyzed compositions namelyBi24Sb20Te56, Bi20Sb12Te69, Bi16Sb5Te79 and Bi29Sb11Te60resulted in four unique microstructure and different volume fraction of primary and secondary phases. The resultant morphologies of the microstructure were observed to have influence the thermoelectric behavior corresponding to each composition. The sole influence of anti-structural defects on the conductivity type and the role of microstructure morphologies and length scale were understood in this chapter. Samples with segregated Te and a solid solution BiSbTe3(eutectic morphology) form an n-type thermoelectric material while samples with only solid solution BiSbTe3 forms a p-type thermoelectric material. Pair of n-type and p-type material was obtained without the introduction of external dopant.The pair shows good compatibility factorsuitable for thermoelectric device. In chapter 4, the thermoelectric properties of four selected composition of Bi-Sb-Te synthesized via low temperature milling plus spark plasma sintering is addressed. The analyzed compositions are as follows Bi24Sb20Te56, Bi18Sb11Te71, Bi17Sb6Te77, and Bi28Sb15Te57 respectively. The effect of low temperature milling combine with the prospect of minimum grain growth of spark plasma sintering on the thermoelectric properties of the selected compositions were determined. Samples with eutectic morphology which would otherwise scatter charge carriers were observed to have the highest carrier mobility as a result of high volume fraction of Te phase which serves as a donor injecting excess electrons into the system. The impact of small grain size was observed on the transport properties of the sample Bi28Sb15Te57 with the highest electrical resistivity, the best Seebeck coefficient and the lowest thermal conductivity. Pair of n-type and p-type material was obtained without the introduction of external doping elements. The pairshows good compatibility factor suitable for segmented thermoelectric device. Chapter 5 narrates the thermoelectric properties of four compositions namely Bi30Sb13Te58, Bi23Sb13Te65, Bi18Sb5Te77 and Bi23Sb20Te58subjected to melt spinning plus spark plasma sintering.High cooling rate obtained during melt spinning process was observed in this chapter to cause a shift of composition which resulted in a microstructure morphology with eutectic colonies that is predominantly Te rich. These Te rich colonies in the sample Bi30Sb13Te58 was observed to change the conductivity type of the sample from an otherwise p-type to n-type while also aiding bipolar conduction which was detrimental to the overall thermoelectric performance of the alloy. Segregated Te in the form of eutectic morphology helps to inject excess electron into the bulk of the sample Bi23Sb13Te65 and Bi18Sb5Te77hereby increases the observed electrical conductivity which by virtue of the microstructure morphology is expected to be low. As a result of the processing routes, all four compositions in this chapter shown-type conductivity. Chapter 6 presents the summary of the important conclusions drawn from this work.

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