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Dive into the research topics where Gangjian Tan is active.

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Featured researches published by Gangjian Tan.


Nature | 2014

Ultralow thermal conductivity and high thermoelectric figure of merit in SnSe crystals

Li-Dong Zhao; Shih Han Lo; Yongsheng Zhang; Hui Sun; Gangjian Tan; Ctirad Uher; C. Wolverton; Vinayak P. Dravid; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

The thermoelectric effect enables direct and reversible conversion between thermal and electrical energy, and provides a viable route for power generation from waste heat. The efficiency of thermoelectric materials is dictated by the dimensionless figure of merit, ZT (where Z is the figure of merit and T is absolute temperature), which governs the Carnot efficiency for heat conversion. Enhancements above the generally high threshold value of 2.5 have important implications for commercial deployment, especially for compounds free of Pb and Te. Here we report an unprecedented ZT of 2.6 ± 0.3 at 923 K, realized in SnSe single crystals measured along the b axis of the room-temperature orthorhombic unit cell. This material also shows a high ZT of 2.3 ± 0.3 along the c axis but a significantly reduced ZT of 0.8 ± 0.2 along the a axis. We attribute the remarkably high ZT along the b axis to the intrinsically ultralow lattice thermal conductivity in SnSe. The layered structure of SnSe derives from a distorted rock-salt structure, and features anomalously high Grüneisen parameters, which reflect the anharmonic and anisotropic bonding. We attribute the exceptionally low lattice thermal conductivity (0.23 ± 0.03 W m−1 K−1 at 973 K) in SnSe to the anharmonicity. These findings highlight alternative strategies to nanostructuring for achieving high thermoelectric performance.


Science | 2016

Ultrahigh power factor and thermoelectric performance in hole-doped single-crystal SnSe

Li-Dong Zhao; Gangjian Tan; Shiqiang Hao; Jiaqing He; Yanling Pei; Hang Chi; Heng Wang; Shengkai Gong; Huibin Xu; Vinayak P. Dravid; Ctirad Uher; G. Jeffrey Snyder; C. Wolverton; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

Heat conversion gets a power boost Thermoelectric materials convert waste heat into electricity, but often achieve high conversion efficiencies only at high temperatures. Zhao et al. tackle this problem by introducing small amounts of sodium to the thermoelectric SnSe (see the Perspective by Behnia). This boosts the power factor, allowing the material to generate more energy while maintaining good conversion efficiency. The effect holds across a wide temperature range, which is attractive for developing new applications. Science, this issue p. 141; see also p. 124 A thermoelectric derived by sodium doping of tin selenide has a high power factor and conversion efficiency over a wide temperature range. [Also see Perspective by Behnia] Thermoelectric technology, harvesting electric power directly from heat, is a promising environmentally friendly means of energy savings and power generation. The thermoelectric efficiency is determined by the device dimensionless figure of merit ZTdev, and optimizing this efficiency requires maximizing ZT values over a broad temperature range. Here, we report a record high ZTdev ∼1.34, with ZT ranging from 0.7 to 2.0 at 300 to 773 kelvin, realized in hole-doped tin selenide (SnSe) crystals. The exceptional performance arises from the ultrahigh power factor, which comes from a high electrical conductivity and a strongly enhanced Seebeck coefficient enabled by the contribution of multiple electronic valence bands present in SnSe. SnSe is a robust thermoelectric candidate for energy conversion applications in the low and moderate temperature range.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

High thermoelectric performance of p-type SnTe via a synergistic band engineering and nanostructuring approach

Gangjian Tan; Li-Dong Zhao; Fengyuan Shi; Jeff W. Doak; Shih Han Lo; Hui Sun; C. Wolverton; Vinayak P. Dravid; Ctirad Uher; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

SnTe is a potentially attractive thermoelectric because it is the lead-free rock-salt analogue of PbTe. However, SnTe is a poor thermoelectric material because of its high hole concentration arising from inherent Sn vacancies in the lattice and its very high electrical and thermal conductivity. In this study, we demonstrate that SnTe-based materials can be controlled to become excellent thermoelectrics for power generation via the successful application of several key concepts that obviate the well-known disadvantages of SnTe. First, we show that Sn self-compensation can effectively reduce the Sn vacancies and decrease the hole carrier density. For example, a 3 mol % self-compensation of Sn results in a 50% improvement in the figure of merit ZT. In addition, we reveal that Cd, nominally isoelectronic with Sn, favorably impacts the electronic band structure by (a) diminishing the energy separation between the light-hole and heavy-hole valence bands in the material, leading to an enhanced Seebeck coefficient, and (b) enlarging the energy band gap. Thus, alloying with Cd atoms enables a form of valence band engineering that improves the high-temperature thermoelectric performance, where p-type samples of SnCd(0.03)Te exhibit ZT values of ~0.96 at 823 K, a 60% improvement over the Cd-free sample. Finally, we introduce endotaxial CdS or ZnS nanoscale precipitates that reduce the lattice thermal conductivity of SnCd(0.03)Te with no effect on the power factor. We report that SnCd(0.03)Te that are endotaxially nanostructured with CdS and ZnS have a maximum ZTs of ~1.3 and ~1.1 at 873 K, respectively. Therefore, SnTe-based materials could be ideal alternatives for p-type lead chalcogenides for high temperature thermoelectric power generation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Valence Band Modification and High Thermoelectric Performance in SnTe Heavily Alloyed with MnTe

Gangjian Tan; Fengyuan Shi; Shiqiang Hao; Hang Chi; Trevor P. Bailey; Li-Dong Zhao; Ctirad Uher; C. Wolverton; Vinayak P. Dravid; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

We demonstrate a high solubility limit of >9 mol% for MnTe alloying in SnTe. The electrical conductivity of SnTe decreases gradually while the Seebeck coefficient increases remarkably with increasing MnTe content, leading to enhanced power factors. The room-temperature Seebeck coefficients of Mn-doped SnTe are significantly higher than those predicted by theoretical Pisarenko plots for pure SnTe, indicating a modified band structure. The high-temperature Hall data of Sn1-xMnxTe show strong temperature dependence, suggestive of a two-valence-band conduction behavior. Moreover, the peak temperature of the Hall plot of Sn1-xMnxTe shifts toward lower temperature as MnTe content is increased, which is clear evidence of decreased energy separation (band convergence) between the two valence bands. The first-principles electronic structure calculations based on density functional theory also support this point. The higher doping fraction (>9%) of Mn in comparison with ∼3% for Cd and Hg in SnTe gives rise to a much better valence band convergence that is responsible for the observed highest Seebeck coefficient of ∼230 μV/K at 900 K. The high doping fraction of Mn in SnTe also creates stronger point defect scattering, which when combined with ubiquitous endotaxial MnTe nanostructures when the solubility of Mn is exceeded scatters a wide spectrum of phonons for a low lattice thermal conductivity of 0.9 W m(-1) K(-1) at 800 K. The synergistic role that Mn plays in regulating the electron and phonon transport of SnTe yields a high thermoelectric figure of merit of 1.3 at 900 K.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Codoping in SnTe: Enhancement of Thermoelectric Performance through Synergy of Resonance Levels and Band Convergence

Gangjian Tan; Fengyuan Shi; Shiqiang Hao; Hang Chi; Li-Dong Zhao; Ctirad Uher; C. Wolverton; Vinayak P. Dravid; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

We report a significant enhancement of the thermoelectric performance of p-type SnTe over a broad temperature plateau with a peak ZT value of ∼1.4 at 923 K through In/Cd codoping and a CdS nanostructuring approach. Indium and cadmium play different but complementary roles in modifying the valence band structure of SnTe. Specifically, In-doping introduces resonant levels inside the valence bands, leading to a considerably improved Seebeck coefficient at low temperature. Cd-doping, however, increases the Seebeck coefficient of SnTe remarkably in the mid- to high-temperature region via a convergence of the light and heavy hole bands and an enlargement of the band gap. Combining the two dopants in SnTe yields enhanced Seebeck coefficient and power factor over a wide temperature range due to the synergy of resonance levels and valence band convergence, as demonstrated by the Pisarenko plot and supported by first-principles band structure calculations. Moreover, these codoped samples can be hierarchically structured on all scales (atomic point defects by doping, nanoscale precipitations by CdS nanostructuring, and mesoscale grains by SPS treatment) to achieve highly effective phonon scattering leading to strongly reduced thermal conductivities. In addition to the high maximum ZT the resultant large average ZT of ∼0.8 between 300 and 923 K makes SnTe an attractive p-type material for high-temperature thermoelectric power generation.


Nature Communications | 2016

Non-equilibrium processing leads to record high thermoelectric figure of merit in PbTe-SrTe.

Gangjian Tan; Fengyuan Shi; Shiqiang Hao; Li-Dong Zhao; Hang Chi; Xiaomi Zhang; Ctirad Uher; C. Wolverton; Vinayak P. Dravid; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

The broad-based implementation of thermoelectric materials in converting heat to electricity hinges on the achievement of high conversion efficiency. Here we demonstrate a thermoelectric figure of merit ZT of 2.5 at 923 K by the cumulative integration of several performance-enhancing concepts in a single material system. Using non-equilibrium processing we show that hole-doped samples of PbTe can be heavily alloyed with SrTe well beyond its thermodynamic solubility limit of <1 mol%. The much higher levels of Sr alloyed into the PbTe matrix widen the bandgap and create convergence of the two valence bands of PbTe, greatly boosting the power factors with maximal values over 30 μW cm−1 K−2. Exceeding the 5 mol% solubility limit leads to endotaxial SrTe nanostructures which produce extremely low lattice thermal conductivity of 0.5 W m−1 K−1 but preserve high hole mobilities because of the matrix/precipitate valence band alignment. The best composition is hole-doped PbTe–8%SrTe.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Distinct Impact of Alkali-Ion Doping on Electrical Transport Properties of Thermoelectric p-Type Polycrystalline SnSe

Tian Ran Wei; Gangjian Tan; Xiaomi Zhang; Chao Feng Wu; Jing-Feng Li; Vinayak P. Dravid; G. Jeffrey Snyder; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

Recent findings about ultrahigh thermoelectric performance in SnSe single crystals have stimulated related research on this simple binary compound, which is focused mostly on its polycrystalline counterparts, and particularly on electrical property enhancement by effective doping. This work systematically investigated the thermoelectric properties of polycrystalline SnSe doped with three alkali metals (Li, Na, and K). It is found that Na has the best doping efficiency, leading to an increase in hole concentration from 3.2 × 10(17) to 4.4 × 10(19) cm(-3) at room temperature, accompanied by a drop in Seebeck coefficient from 480 to 142 μV/K. An equivalent single parabolic band model was found adequate to capture the variation tendency of Seebeck coefficient with doping levels within a wide range. A mixed scattering of carriers by acoustic phonons and grain boundaries is suitable for numerically understanding the temperature-dependence of carrier mobility. A maximum ZT of ∼0.8 was achieved in 1% Na- or K-doped SnSe at 800 K. Possible strategies to improve the mobility and ZT of polycrystals were also proposed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Enhanced Thermoelectric Properties in the Counter-Doped SnTe System with Strained Endotaxial SrTe

Li-Dong Zhao; Xiao Zhang; Haijun Wu; Gangjian Tan; Yanling Pei; Yu Xiao; Cheng Chang; Di Wu; Hang Chi; Lei Zheng; Shengkai Gong; Ctirad Uher; Jiaqing He; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

We report enhanced thermoelectric performance in SnTe, where significantly improved electrical transport properties and reduced thermal conductivity were achieved simultaneously. The former was obtained from a larger hole Seebeck coefficient through Fermi level tuning by optimizing the carrier concentration with Ga, In, Bi, and Sb dopants, resulting in a power factor of 21 μW cm(-1) K(-2) and ZT of 0.9 at 823 K in Sn(0.97)Bi(0.03)Te. To reduce the lattice thermal conductivity without deteriorating the hole carrier mobility in Sn(0.97)Bi(0.03)Te, SrTe was chosen as the second phase to create strained endotaxial nanostructures as phonon scattering centers. As a result, the lattice thermal conductivity decreases strongly from ∼2.0 Wm(-1) K(-1) for Sn(0.97)Bi(0.03)Te to ∼1.2 Wm(-1) K(-1) as the SrTe content is increased from 0 to 5.0% at room temperature and from ∼1.1 to ∼0.70 Wm(-1) K(-1) at 823 K. For the Sn(0.97)Bi(0.03)Te-3% SrTe sample, this leads to a ZT of 1.2 at 823 K and a high average ZT (for SnTe) of 0.7 in the temperature range of 300-823 K, suggesting that SnTe is a robust candidate for medium-temperature thermoelectric applications.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2016

SnSe: a remarkable new thermoelectric material

Li-Dong Zhao; Cheng Chang; Gangjian Tan; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis

The deceptively simple material SnSe has surprised the scientific community by showing an unexpectedly low thermal conductivity and high power factor and it has become a very promising thermoelectric material. Both the electrical and thermal transport properties of SnSe are outstanding. It is remarkable that a binary compound exhibits strong anharmonic and anisotropic bonding, and after hole doping it shows an exceptionally high power factor because of a high electrical conductivity and a strongly enhanced Seebeck coefficient. The latter is enabled by the contribution of multiple electronic valence bands. In this perspective, we discuss the natural features of SnSe, including crystal structures, electronic band structures, and physical and chemical properties. We also compare the electrical transport properties of single crystals and polycrystalline SnSe. The thermal conductivities of polycrystalline samples show wide variation from laboratory to laboratory, with some values being higher than those of single crystals and some lower, which has caused confusion and controversy. To address the issues regarding the thermal transport properties of SnSe, we systematically summarize the reports for SnSe variants, discuss them along with some of our own new results, and offer possible explanations. Finally, some possible strategies are proposed toward future enhancements of the thermoelectric figure of merit of SnSe.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012

Enhanced thermoelectric properties of Bi2(Te1−xSex)3-based compounds as n-type legs for low-temperature power generation

Shanyu Wang; Gangjian Tan; Wenjie Xie; Gang Zheng; Han Li; Jihui Yang; Xinfeng Tang

The abundance of low-temperature waste heat necessitates the development of reliable and scalable thermal-to-electric energy conversion technology. The thermoelectric device is one viable option. Commercially available Bi2Te3-based materials are optimized for near room temperature cooling applications. Currently there are no mass-produced materials available for 400 K to 650 K thermoelectric power generation. We report the successful realization of high performance n-type Bi2(Te1−xSex)3-based materials for the temperature range of interest, using a commercial zone-melting technique. The introduction of Se effectively increases the band gap, which significantly suppresses the “turn-over” in Seebeck coefficient and the appearance of a pronounced bipolar effect, shifting the corresponding temperature of the optimum thermoelectric figure of merit ZT towards a higher temperature range. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the electron concentration of Bi2(Te0.5Se0.5)3 can be effectively adjusted by iodine doping. The samples with electron concentrations between 3 × 1019 and 4.5 × 1019 cm−3 display optimal thermoelectric performances. The highest ZT value reaches 0.86 at 600 K for the sample with the electron concentration of 4.0 × 1019 cm−3, whose average ZT between 400 K and 640 K is 0.8, making this scalable zone-melted low-Te content Bi2(Te0.5Se0.5)3 compound a promising candidate for low-temperature power generation.

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Ctirad Uher

University of Michigan

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Xinfeng Tang

Wuhan University of Technology

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C. Wolverton

Northwestern University

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Shiqiang Hao

Northwestern University

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Hang Chi

University of Michigan

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Yonggao Yan

Wuhan University of Technology

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Fengyuan Shi

Northwestern University

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