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      Complex Oxide Materials for Potential Thermoelectric Applications

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      MRS Bulletin
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Most cited references32

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          Thermoelectric cooling and power generation

          DiSalvo (1999)
          In a typical thermoelectric device, a junction is formed from two different conducting materials, one containing positive charge carriers (holes) and the other negative charge carriers (electrons). When an electric current is passed in the appropriate direction through the junction, both types of charge carriers move away from the junction and convey heat away, thus cooling the junction. Similarly, a heat source at the junction causes carriers to flow away from the junction, making an electrical generator. Such devices have the advantage of containing no moving parts, but low efficiencies have limited their use to specialty applications, such as cooling laser diodes. The principles of thermoelectric devices are reviewed and strategies for increasing the efficiency of novel materials are explored. Improved materials would not only help to cool advanced electronics but could also provide energy benefits in refrigeration and when using waste heat to generate electrical power.
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            Large thermoelectric power inNaCo2O4single crystals

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              Superconductivity in two-dimensional CoO2 layers.

              Since the discovery of high-transition-temperature (high-T(c)) superconductivity in layered copper oxides, many researchers have searched for similar behaviour in other layered metal oxides involving 3d-transition metals, such as cobalt and nickel. Such attempts have so far failed, with the result that the copper oxide layer is thought to be essential for superconductivity. Here we report that Na(x)CoO2*yH2O (x approximately 0.35, y approximately 1.3) is a superconductor with a T(c) of about 5 K. This compound consists of two-dimensional CoO2 layers separated by a thick insulating layer of Na+ ions and H2O molecules. There is a marked resemblance in superconducting properties between the present material and high-T(c) copper oxides, suggesting that the two systems have similar underlying physics.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                MRS Bulletin
                MRS Bull.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0883-7694
                1938-1425
                March 2006
                January 2011
                : 31
                : 03
                : 206-210
                Article
                10.1557/mrs2006.46
                5d855c6d-95ea-442a-94ec-30172e52eb7d
                © 2006
                History

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