posted on 2015-01-26, 10:32authored byHugo R. Williams, Richard M. Ambrosi, K. Chen, U. Friedman, H. Ning, M. J. Reece, M. C. Robbins, K. Simpson, K. Stephenson
The mechanical properties of bismuth telluride based thermoelectric materials have received much less attention in the literature than their thermoelectric properties. Polycrystalline p-type Bi0.5Sb1.5Te3 materials were produced from powder using spark plasma sintering (SPS). The effects of nano-B4C addition on the thermoelectric performance, Vickers hardness and fracture toughness were measured. Addition of 0.2 vol% B4C was found to have little effect on zT but increased hardness by approximately 27% when compared to polycrystalline material without B4C. The KIC fracture toughness of these compositions was measured as 0.80 MPa m1/2 by Single-Edge V-Notched Beam (SEVNB). The machinability of polycrystalline materials produced by SPS was significantly better than commercially available directionally solidified materials because the latter is limited by cleavage along the crystallographic plane parallel to the direction of solidification.
Funding
Performed under contract to the European Space Agency under the Thermoelectric Converter for Small-Scale RTG programme, 23026/10/NL/AT.
History
Citation
Journal of Alloys and Compounds Volume 626, 25 March 2015, Pages 368–374
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Engineering