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Creators/Authors contains: "Kuo, Jimmy_Jiahong"

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  1. Abstract Nanostructuring to reduce thermal conductivity is among the most promising strategies for designing next‐generation, high‐performance thermoelectric materials. In practice, electrical grain boundary resistance can overwhelm the thermal conductivity reduction induced by nanostructuring, which results in worse overall performance. Since a large body of work has characterized the transport of both polycrystalline ceramics and single crystals of SrTiO3, it is an ideal material system for conducting a case study of electrical grain boundary resistance. An effective mass model is used to characterize the transport signatures of electrical grain boundary resistance and evaluate thermodynamic design principles for controlling that resistance. Treating the grain boundary as a secondary phase to the bulk crystallites explains the transport phenomena. Considering that the interface can be engineered by controlling oxygen partial pressure, temperature, and the addition of extrinsic elements into the grain boundary phase, the outlook for SrTiO3as a nanostructured thermoelectric is promising, and thezTcould be greater than 0.5 at room temperature. 
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  2. Abstract Highly resistive grain boundaries significantly reduce the electrical conductivity that compromises the thermoelectric figure‐of‐meritzTin n‐type polycrystalline Mg3Sb2. In this work, discovered is a Mg deficiency near grain boundaries using atom‐probe tomography. Approximately 5 at% of Mg deficiency is observed uniformly in a 10 nm region along the grain boundary without any evidence of a stable secondary or impurity phase. The off‐stoichiometry can prevent n‐type dopants from providing electrons, lowering the local carrier concentration near the grain boundary and thus the local conductivity. This observation explains how nanometer scale compositional variations can dramatically determine thermoelectriczT, and provides concrete strategies to reduce grain‐boundary resistance and increasezTin Mg3Sb2‐based materials. 
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  3. Abstract Grain boundaries critically limit the electronic performance of oxide perovskites. These interfaces lower the carrier mobilities of polycrystalline materials by several orders of magnitude compared to single crystals. Despite extensive effort, improving the mobility of polycrystalline materials (to meet the performance of single crystals) is still a severe challenge. In this work, the grain boundary effect is eliminated in perovskite strontium titanate (STO) by incorporating graphene into the polycrystalline microstructure. An effective mass model provides strong evidence that polycrystalline graphene/strontium titanate (G/STO) nanocomposites approach single crystal‐like charge transport. This phenomenological model reduces the complexity of analyzing charge transport properties so that a quantitative comparison can be made between the nanocomposites and STO single crystals. In other related works, graphene composites also optimize the thermal transport properties of thermoelectric materials. Therefore, decorating grain boundaries with graphene appears to be a robust strategy to achieve “phonon glass–electron crystal” behavior in oxide perovskites. 
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