As concerns with the efficient use of energy resources, and the
minimization of environmental damage have come to the fore, there
has been a renewed interest in the role that thermoelectric devices
could play in generating electricity from waste heat, enabling
cooling via refrigerators with no moving parts, and many other more
specialized applications. The main problem in realizing this
ambition is the rather low efficiency of such devices for general
applications. This book deals with the proceedings of a workshop
addressed that problems by reviewing the latest experimental and
theoretical work on suitable materials for device applications and
by exploring various strategies that might increase their
efficiency.
The proceedings cover a broad range of approaches, from the
experimental work of fabricating new compounds through to
theoretical work in characterizing and understanding their
properties. The effects of strong electron correlation, disorder,
the proximity to metal-insulator transitions, the properties of
layered composite materials, and the introduction of voids or cages
into the structure to reduce the lattice thermal conductivity are
all explored as ways of enhancing the efficiency of their use in
thermoelectric devices.
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