Thermoelectric properties of a nanocontact made of two-capped single-wall carbon nanotubes calculated within the tight-binding approximation
- 9 February 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 73 (8) , 085406
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.73.085406
Abstract
Thermoelectric properties of a nanocontact made of two capped single wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) are calculated within the tight-binding approximation and by using Green’s function method. It is found that doped semiconducting nanotubes can have high Seebeck coefficients. This in turn leads to very high figures of merit for -doped tubes which turn out to have also a large electrical to thermal conductivity ratio. Transport in the nanocontact device is dominated by quantum interference effects, and thus it can be tuned by doping (charge transfer and/or impurity potential) or application of a (nano-)gate voltage, or a magnetic field. Another reason for high in this device is the absence of phonon transport as there is barely a contact.
Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Charge transfer and Fermi level shift in-doped single-walled carbon nanotubesPhysical Review B, 2005
- Profiling the Thermoelectric Power of Semiconductor Junctions with Nanometer ResolutionScience, 2004
- Cubic AgPb
m
SbTe 2+
m
: Bulk Thermoelectric Materials with High Figure of MeritScience, 2004
- Dispersion of single wall carbon nanotubes by in situ polymerization under sonicationChemical Physics Letters, 2002
- Thin-film thermoelectric devices with high room-temperature figures of meritNature, 2001
- Theoretical modeling of thermoelectricity in Bi nanowiresApplied Physics Letters, 1999
- Thermoelectric Power of Single-Walled Carbon NanotubesPhysical Review Letters, 1998
- Thermionic refrigerationJournal of Applied Physics, 1994
- Thermoelectric figure of merit of a one-dimensional conductorPhysical Review B, 1993
- Effect of quantum-well structures on the thermoelectric figure of meritPhysical Review B, 1993