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Quantum Sensing of Thermoelectric Power in Low‐Dimensional Materials

Mali Zhao, Dohyun Kim, Young Hee Lee, Heejun Yang, Suyeon Cho

2021Advanced Materials20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Thermoelectric power, has been extensively studied in low-dimensional materials where quantum confinement and spin textures can largely modulate thermopower generation. In addition to classical and macroscopic values, thermopower also varies locally over a wide range of length scales, and is fundamentally linked to electron wave functions and phonon propagation. Various experimental methods for the quantum sensing of localized thermopower have been suggested, particularly based on scanning probe microscopy. Here, critical advances in the quantum sensing of thermopower are introduced, from the atomic to the several-hundred-nanometer scales, including the unique role of low-dimensionality, defects, spins, and relativistic effects for optimized power generation. Investigating the microscopic nature of thermopower in quantum materials can provide insights useful for the design of advanced materials for future thermoelectric applications. Quantum sensing techniques for thermopower can pave the way to practical and novel energy devices for a sustainable society.

Topics & Concepts

Seebeck coefficientMaterials scienceThermoelectric effectCondensed matter physicsThermoelectric materialsQuantumSpinsNanotechnologyPhysicsQuantum mechanicsAdvanced Thermoelectric Materials and DevicesThermal properties of materialsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
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