Piezoelectric and Thermoelectric Properties of Transition Metal-Doped Compounds: An Ab-initio Study
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Université de Mostaganem
Abstract
In this work, advanced ab initio DFT calculations using GGA-PBsol and nKTB-mBJ functionals
within the full-potential linear augmented plane wave (FP-LAPW) method were employed to
investigate key characteristics, such as the structural, electronic, elastic, piezoelectric,
dielectric, thermodynamic, and thermoelectric properties of two eco-friendly materials: the
perovskite Na₀.₅Bi₀.₅TiO₃ (NBT) and YxAl₁₋ₓN (with 0≤ x ≤ 0.375) to explore their potential
for application in piezoelectric and thermoelectric technologies.
The first part of the study focused on perovskite Na₀.₅Bi₀.₅TiO₃ (NBT), crystalized in
rhombohedral (R3c), tetragonal (Pb4m), and cubic (Pm3̅m) phases. These crystals exhibited
indirect bandgaps of 3.05–3.29 eV, elastic stability, and high piezoelectric coefficients in the
tetragonal phase [d15 = 101.1 pC/N, d31 = -51.3 pC/N, and d33 = 81.1 pC/N]. The thermoelectric
properties of NBT included Seebeck coefficients of up to 201.42 μV/K at 500 K and ZT values
reaching 2.76 at 700 K.
In the second part of the study, DFT simulations revealed a near-linear variation in lattice
parameters with increasing yttrium content for YxAl₁₋ₓN (0≤ x ≤ 0.375) alloys, and tunable
bandgaps ranging from 6.10 eV to 3.85 eV, making these alloys suitable for ultraviolet emission
applications. Additionally, BoltzTraP calculations indicated promising electronic transport
properties, including Seebeck coefficients up to 213.9 μV/K and a figure of merit (ZT) of ~0.72
at x = 0.25 (600 K). Thermal conductivity per relaxation time was also low, at κ/τ ~9.9 × 10¹³
W.m⁻¹.K⁻¹.s⁻¹. Piezoelectric coefficients for YxAl₁₋ₓN at x = 0.375 were significantly enhanced,
with d33 = 17.5 pC/N, d15 = 11.07 pC/N, and d31 = 8.65 pC/N, representing increases of ~300%,
~400%, and ~370%, respectively, compared to pure AlN crystals.
Finally, the results highlight the potential of Na₀.₅Bi₀.₅TiO₃ and YxAl₁₋ₓN for green energy
applications, optoelectronics, high-performance piezoelectric devices, and high-power
thermoelectric technologies.