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Suh, Joonki
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Anomalously high electronic thermal conductivity and Lorenz ratio in Bi2Te3 nanoribbons far from the bipolar condition

Author(s)
Choe, Hwan SungLi, JiachenZheng, WenjingLee, JaejunSuh, JoonkiAllen, Frances I.Liu, HuiliChoi, Heon-JinWalukiewicz, WladekZheng, HaimeiWu, Junqiao
Issued Date
2019-04
DOI
10.1063/1.5092221
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/27074
Fulltext
https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/1.5092221
Citation
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, v.114, no.15, pp.152101
Abstract
The Lorenz number (L) of a conductor is the ratio between its electronic thermal conductivity and electrical conductivity. It takes the Sommerfeld value of L-0 = (pi(2)/3)(k(B)/e)(2) in simple, metallically electronic systems where charge and heat are both carried by the same group of quasi-particles that experience elastic scattering. Higher values of L than L-0 are possible in semiconductors where both electrons and holes co-exist at high densities, that is, in bipolar conduction. As a narrow-bandgap semiconductor, Bi2Te3 exhibits L > L-0 which has been generally attributed to such bipolar conduction mechanisms. However, in this work, we report that L > L-0 is still observed in individual, single-crystal Bi2Te3 nanoribbons even at low temperatures and when degenerately doped, that is, far from the bipolar conduction condition. This discovery calls for different mechanisms to explain the unconventional electronic thermal transport behavior in Bi2Te3.
Publisher
AMER INST PHYSICS
ISSN
0003-6951
Keyword
SCATTERINGTRANSPORT

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