RQMP Research Seminar
Predictive theoretical modeling of electro-thermal
transport
Jesse Maassen
Department of Physics and Atmospheric Science Dalhousie
University
A major challenge facing the world today involves exploiting clean,
abundant energy sources, and reducing our overall consumption. A significant
untapped energy source is waste heat, accounting for ~60% of the energy
humans produce. Thermoelectrics are materials that can convert heat into
useful electrical power, and hence have the potential to impact our energy
future. The challenge is to design or discover thermoelectrics with high
conversion efficiency, which requires a fundamental understanding of how
electrons and heat (phonons) flow in materials.
In this talk, I will give a brief overview of thermoelectrics, discuss our
predictive modeling approach and present some of our recent findings from
two studies. 1) Electron transport in GeTe, a quasi-2D material, which we
predict to have unusual anisotropic properties. 2) Phonon transport across
a Si-Ge interface, in which inelastic phonon scattering and non-equilibrium
physics play a key role.
Thursday, November 12th 2020, 10:30
Tele-seminar
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