Room-temperature exceptional plasticity in defective Bi 2 Te 3 -based bulk thermoelectric crystals
Chinese Academy of Sciences · Shanghai Institute of Ceramics · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The recently discovered metal-like room-temperature plasticity in inorganic semiconductors reshapes our knowledge of the physical properties of materials, giving birth to a series of new-concept functional materials. However, current room-temperature plastic inorganic semiconductors are still very rare, and their performance is inferior to that of classic brittle semiconductors. Taking classic bismuth telluride (Bi 2 Te 3 )–based thermoelectric semiconductors as an example, we show that antisite defects can lead to high-density, diverse microstructures that substantially affect mechanical properties and thus successfully transform these bulk semiconductors from brittle to plastic, leading to a high figure of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 70
Authors
12- TDTaowu DengCorresponding
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- ZGZhiqiang GaoCorresponding
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
- ZLZe Li
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- ZLZe LiCorresponding
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- PQPengfei QiuCorresponding
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Topics & keywords
- Semiconductor
- Materials science
- Brittleness
- Thermoelectric effect
- Plasticity
- Bismuth telluride
- Thermoelectric materials
- Bismuth