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Title: Thermoelectric characterization of suspended single silicon%3CU%2B2010%3Egermanium alloy nanowires.

Conference ·
OSTI ID:1030359

The use of nanowires for thermoelectric energy generation has gained momentum in recent years as an approach to improve the figure of merit (ZT) due in part to larger phonon scattering at the boundary resulting in reduced thermal conductivity while electrical conductivity is not significantly affected. Silicon-germanium (SiGe) alloy nanowires are promising candidates to further reduce thermal conductivity by phonon scattering because bulk SiGe alloys already have thermal conductivity comparable to reported Si nanowires. In this work, we show that thermal and electrical conductivity can be measured for the same single nanowire eliminating the uncertainties in ZT estimation due to measuring the thermal conduction on one set of wires and the electrical conduction on another set. In order to do so, we use nanomanipulation to place vapor-liquid-solid boron-doped SiGe alloy nanowires on predefined surface structures. Furthermore, we developed a contact-annealing technique to achieve negligible electrical contact resistance for the placed nanowires that allows us, for the first time, to measure electrical and thermal properties on the same device. We observe that thermal conductivity for SiGe nanowires is dominated by alloy scattering for nanowires down to 100 nm in diameter between the temperature range 40-300 K. The estimated electronic contribution of the thermal conductivity as given by the Wiedemann-Franz relationship is about 1 order of magnitude smaller than the measured thermal conductivity which indicates that phonons carry a large portion of the heat even at such small dimensions.

Research Organization:
Sandia National Laboratories (SNL), Albuquerque, NM, and Livermore, CA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
DOE Contract Number:
AC04-94AL85000
OSTI ID:
1030359
Report Number(s):
SAND2010-7941C; TRN: US201124%%144
Resource Relation:
Conference: Proposed for presentation at the 2010 AIChE Annual Conference held November 7-12, 2010 in Salt Lake City, UT.
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English