Entropy stabilization is a novel materials-design paradigm to realize new compounds with widely tunable properties. However, almost all entropystabilized materials so far are either conducting metals or insulating ceramics, with a clear dearth in the semiconducting regime. Here, a new class of the multicationic and -anionic entropy-stabilized chalcogenide alloys based on the (Ge,Sn,Pb)(S,Se,Te) formula are synthesized and characterized experimentally. The configurational entropy from the disorder of both the anion and the cation sublattices reaches a record value of ∼2.2 R mol −1 for the equimolar composition and stabilizes the singlephase solid solution. Theoretical calculations and experiments both show that the synthesized alloys are thermodynamically stable at the growth temperature and kinetically metastable at room temperature, segregating by spinodal decomposition at moderate temperatures. Doping and electronic transport measurements verify that the synthesized materials are ambipolarly dopable semiconductors, which pave the way for the wider adoption of entropy-stabilized chalcogenide alloys in functional applications.
We combine 150-fs holographic gating with specifically adapted electronic holography techniques to produce transmission images of objects embedded in diffusing material. The technique captures, without the use of scanning procedures, complete two-dimensional images with 150-fs temporal resolution, thereby yielding submillimeter spatial resolution through diffusing objects several centimeters thick.
PbBiSe, the selenium analogue of heyrovsyite, crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Cmcm (#63) with a = 4.257(1) Å, b = 14.105(3) Å, and c = 32.412(7) Å at 300 K. Its crystal structure consists of two NaCl-type layers, A and B, with equal thickness, N = N = 7, where N is the number of edge-sharing [Pb/Bi]Se octahedra along the central diagonal. In the crystal structure, adjacent layers are arranged along the c-axis such that bridging bicapped trigonal prisms, PbSe, are located on a pseudomirror plane parallel to (001). Therefore, PbBiSe corresponds to a L member of the lillianite homologous series. Electronic transport measurements indicate that the compound is a heavily doped narrow band gap n-type semiconductor, with electrical conductivity and thermopower values of 350 S/cm and -53 μV/K at 300 K. Interestingly, the compound exhibits a moderately low thermal conductivity, ∼1.1 W/mK, in the whole temperature range, owing to its complex crystal structure, which enables strong phonon scattering at the twin boundaries between adjacent NaCl-type layers A and B. The dimensionless figure of merit, ZT, increases with temperature to 0.25 at 673 K.
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