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Communication

A Comprehensive Study of Sn-Ga2Te3-SnTe Amorphous Alloys: Glass Formation and Crystallization Kinetics

1
State Key Laboratory of Metastable Materials Science and Technology, College of Materials Science and Engineering, Yanshan University, Qinhuangdao 066004, China
2
School of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, Henan Institute of Science and Technology, Xinxiang 453003, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 2 February 2023 / Revised: 2 March 2023 / Accepted: 5 March 2023 / Published: 6 March 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mechanical Deformation Behavior of Amorphous Metallic Materials)

Abstract

:
In this paper, newly developed tellurium-based [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx amorphous alloys were prepared by the melt-spun method, with a linear velocity of 40 m/s and injection pressure of 20 kPa under an Ar atmosphere. The glass-forming region was identified in the range of x = 0 to 10 mol%. The glass transition temperature Tg and crystallization onset temperature Tc decreased monotonically with the increasing Sn content in the whole compositional range, resulting in the decrease in the stability criterion ΔT from 33 K (S2) to 23 K (S10). The crystallization kinetics were systematically investigated based on the differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) under non-isothermal conditions. The activation energies of the S8 amorphous sample determined by Kissinger and Ozawa equations were Eg (201.1~209.6 kJ/mol), Ec (188.7~198.3 kJ/mol), Ep1 (229.8~240.1 kJ/mol) and Ep2 (264.2~272.6 kJ/mol), respectively. The microscopic structure of the S8 amorphous sample and its annealed glass-ceramics were also analyzed by X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and selected-area electron diffraction (SAED). The crystalline products were identified as having a SnTe phase (primary crystalline phase) and Ga6SnTe10 phase, thus providing a promising candidate for the development of high-performance thermoelectric glass-ceramic materials.

1. Introduction

Thermoelectric (TE) materials are capable of the conversion between electricity and thermal, rendering them desirable for waste heat recycling or power generation [1,2,3]. The TE efficiency was calculated by the equation ZT = S2σT/κ, where S is the Seebeck coefficient, σ is the electrical conductivity, κ is the total thermal conductivity, T is the absolute temperature and S2σ is defined as the power factor (PF) [4,5,6]. In recent years, the unique physical and electronic properties of tellurium and tellurium-based semiconductors have been harnessed to create high-efficiency thermoelectric generators due to their excellent comprehensive parameters (relatively high S, σ and low κ), when compared with insulators and metals [7]. Naturally, materials with intrinsic low thermal conductivity have been investigated as potential objectives with outstanding TE properties [8,9,10].
Chalcogenide amorphous materials, especially tellurium-based amorphous alloys, as the most conductive semiconductor amorphous materials, meanwhile, possess relatively low phonon energy and extremely low thermal conductivity, which also demonstrates their superior TE research prospects [11,12,13,14,15,16]. But, tellurium has a certain toxicity and inhalational exposure predominates, especially when absorbed through the skin. Typically, the manifestation of the acute toxicity of tellurium is nausea, vomiting and garlic odor on the breath [17,18]. Therefore, the operator should wear a self-priming filter dust mask, rubber gloves and safety protective clothing, preferably performing the actual experimental operation in a vacuum glove box. However, the main obstacle hindering tellurium-based amorphous alloys for TE applications was their poor electrical conductivity.
In general, physical, chemical and mechanical properties are intimately related to micro-structure, such as atomic size, distribution and morphology [19,20,21,22]. Further investigations on glass-ceramics have illustrated that the properties of the amorphous matrix could be remarkably improved by controlling the partial crystallization [23,24,25,26,27,28]. Analogously, amorphous alloys with certain fractions of TE crystalline phases could promote the enhancement of the carrier concentrations and phonon scattering, thereby producing superior electrical transport properties while maintaining low thermal conductivity [29,30,31,32,33]. For instance, investigations of the Cu-As-Te amorphous system have verified this concept. The partial crystallization of the amorphous matrix lead to drastic increases in electrical conductivity by at least two orders of magnitude [30]. For the Cu15As30Te55 amorphous composition, the electrical conductivity rose by about five orders of magnitude when the β-As2Te3 crystallization phase was presented in the amorphous matrix [31]. The Heusler glass-ceramics prepared by crystallizing the NbCo1.1Sn amorphous precursor at 893 K for 2 h exhibited a more enhanced electrical transport performance than the half-Heusler NbCoSn matrix from 310~710 K [32]. Compared to the Fe78Si9B13 amorphous precursor, the PF for the Fe78Si9B13 glass-ceramics annealed at 833 K for 20 min increased by 2200% at 575 K and increased by an average of about 1400% over the entire measurement temperature range [33].
Therefore, it is particularly essential to investigate the transition characteristics, crystallization kinetics parameters and precipitated phases in order to provide theoretical guidance for obtaining the desired properties and for the practical application of glass-ceramic materials. In this paper, newly developed tellurium-based [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx amorphous alloys were fabricated using the melt-spun method and the glass-forming regions were ascertained. The glass transition behavior and crystallization process were then systematically investigated under non-isothermal conditions. Moreover, the characteristic temperatures and their associated activation energies were evaluated through the Kissinger and Ozawa methods on the basis of the differential scanning calorimeter (DSC). In addition, the microstructure evolutions were analyzed by X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscope (TEM) and selected-area electron diffraction (SAED) and the crystalline products are also discussed.

2. Experimental

High-purity metals and compounds of Sn (99.99%), SnTe (99.9%) and Ga2Te3 (99.9%) were weighed on the stoichiometric ratio of [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx (x = 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 15, denoted as S0, S2, S4, S6, S8, S10 and S15, respectively). The mixtures were placed into a 12 mm inner diameter quartz tube with an oxygen–hydrogen flame under a vacuum of 10−3 Pa and then heated in a resistance furnace at 1153 K for 10 h. Throughout the isothermal heating period, the quartz tubes for each composition were rocked and turned upside down and the same processes were repeated at least five times to ensure a homogeneous mixture. The as-cast ingot was finally dropped below 303 K in the furnace and cut into small pieces for the melt-spun process. The as-cast ingot (8~10 g) was placed in a quartz tube and injected onto a high-speed rotating copper roller (20 kPa, 40 m/s, under an Ar atmosphere).
The grinding of the melt-spun flakes as powders was carried out for subsequent thermal and structural investigations. The thermodynamic characteristic temperature was determined by heating the powders (6~10 mg) in the Al pans from 300 K to 600 K at 20 K/min by DSC (Perkin-Elmer 8000). The non-isothermal crystallization kinetic parameters were analyzed by continuous heating at different heating rates (10, 20, 25 and 30 K/min). The structure characterizations of the melt-spun and annealed powders were measured by XRD (Rigaku Ltd., Tokyo, Japan, D/MAX/2500/PC, Cu Kα radiation with a wavelength of λ = 1.5406 Å) in the 2 θ range 20~60° at a speed of 2°/min. The melt-spun and annealed samples were first ground and polished on both sides until the thickness was ~30 μm and then were ultrasonically cleaned for 5 min in ethanol medium. The cleaned foils were pasted onto the copper grid and further thinned by the Gatan 695-B precision ion polishing system until electron transparency. The micro-structure was analyzed on the TEM (JEOL Ltd., Tokyo, Japan, JEM-2010) operated at 200 kV.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Structure Analysis and Glass Forming Region

The XRD patterns of the melt-spun [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx samples are exhibited in Figure 1a. For the S0–S10 specimens, two widened peaks were detected in the diffraction patterns without any visible Bragg crystal peaks, confirming the completely amorphous structure. The micro-structure of the S8 sample was also characterized by TEM and SAED, as depicted in Figure 1b,c. A pure and homogeneous morphological surface can be observed in the S8 sample in the TEM image, as shown in Figure 1b, and the SAED pattern in Figure 1c was featured with a wide halo ring, which also demonstrated the amorphous nature of the S8 sample. For the S15 sample, four distinctive characteristic peaks were detected and identified as the SnTe crystalline phase (ICDD Xrd data: PDF#46-1210), indicating that the crystallization phenomenon began to occur. Therefore, the glass-forming region of the presently researched [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx systems ranged from x = 0 to 10 mol% of Sn.
It should be noted that only a few Ge-Te or As-Te amorphous systems have been studied until now, such as the Cu-Ge-Te [34], Cu-As-Te [31], Cu-Ga-Te [35], Cu-Ge-As-Te [36] and Cu-As-Se-Te [13] systems. However, narrow-band-gap tellurium-based amorphous alloys, composed mainly of high-performance thermoelectric materials, such as SnTe, PbTe or Bi2Te3, have rarely been reported. In this work, the newly developed Ga2Te3-SnTe-Sn amorphous family provided a new option for thermoelectric materials and also broadened the research field of tellurium-based amorphous systems.

3.2. Thermal Analysis and Thermal Stability

The glass transition characteristics of [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx completely amorphous samples (x ≤ 10%) were investigated by DSC and the heat flow traces with a fixed heating rate of 20 K/min were presented in Figure 2a. Three marked characteristic temperatures were clearly observed in the S2 cure: the glass transition temperature Tg, the crystallization onset temperature Tc and the crystallization peak temperature Tp, further confirmed the amorphous state of the investigated samples. As the Sn doping content increased from 2 to 10, the crystallization behaviors underwent a transformation from a one-step reaction to a two-step reaction. The values of Tg, Tc, Tp and ΔT for the studied amorphous sample are listed in Table 1.
As depicted in Figure 2b, the Tg and Tc decreased monotonically with the increase in Sn content in the whole compositional range, which implies a weaker structural rigidity. The similar investigation results were also reported in both Agx(Ge5Sb25Se70)1−x and Ag30+xAs28−xSe21Te21 glass systems, arising from the doped atoms, which could reduce the cross-linking degree of glass topological network [37,38]. The Dietzel stability criterion ΔT = Tc − Tg was widely adopted in order to analyze the thermal stability of amorphous alloys [39]. For all the studied samples, the values of ΔT were relatively low and decreased from 33 K (S2) to 23 K (S10). In particular, when the Sn content was higher than 10 mol%, owing to the excessive metallic features [40], the stability of the amorphous structure was destabilized and the crystalline phase began to precipitate, as observed in the XRD patterns of the S15 sample, which made it difficult to estimate its ΔT.
Although the doping of Sn reduced the Tg and ΔT of the Ga2Te3-SnTe-Sn amorphous system, it would provide a significant contribution to the strengthening of the conductivity of the amorphous materials. On this basis, the S8 amorphous alloy was selected as the subsequent target, on account of its excellent TE potential coupled with the relatively moderate thermal stability.

3.3. Non-Isothermal Crystallization Kinetics

The non-isothermal DSC traces of the S8 amorphous powers at different heating rates (10, 20, 25 and 30 K/min) are presented in Figure 3a.
All the DSC traces revealed an endothermic behavior of the vitrification from amorphous state to the under-cooled phase, followed by two separate exothermic peaks (named Tp1 and Tp2, from low to high temperature, respectively), which correspond to the crystallization of the under-cooled liquid state. With the β increasing from 10 to 30 K/min, the characteristic temperatures moved to higher temperatures, revealing that the glass transition and crystallization processes were thermally activated. The values of Tg, Tc, Tp1 and Tp2 with different heating rates are listed in Table 2.
The sensitivity of the characteristic temperatures as a function of heating rate can be expressed by Lasocka’s relations [41]:
T = A + B ln β
where T is the characteristic temperature, A and B are constants, and the β stands for the heating rate. Figure 3b presents the relationships between Tg, Tc, Tp1 and Tp versus the ln(β) of the S8 sample. The values of A and B were calculated by the linear fit. The larger the B value, the characteristic temperature was more sensitive to the heating rate. For the investigated S8 amorphous sample, both the glass transition and crystallization process exhibited clear kinetic influences and the B value for Tg (BTg = 9.32) were smaller than Tc (BTc = 10.88), implying that the crystallization behavior was more susceptible to the heating rate.

3.4. Activation Energy

The Kissinger method and the Ozawa equation are typically applied to evaluate the activation energy of the solid-state reactions under non-isothermal conditions and can be expressed as follows [42,43]:
Kissinger equation
ln T 2 β = E R T + constant
Ozawa equation
ln β = E R T + c o n s t a n t
where β represents the heating rate, R is the gas constant (8.314 J/mol K); T represents the characteristic temperature of Tg, Tc and Tp; and E denoted the apparent activation energy of the corresponding temperatures such as glass transformation activation energy (Eg) and the crystallization activation energy (Ec and Ep). Figure 4a,b, respectively, present the Kissinger and Ozawa plots of the S8 amorphous samples at different heating rates. The values of E were calculated by from the slopes of the linear by fitting the plots of the ln(T2/β) versus 1000/T and ln(β) versus 1000/T, and the corresponding Eg, Ec, Ep1 and Ep2 values are listed in Table 3.
The activation energies E determined by the Kissinger and Ozawa equations were fairly similar to each other, indicating that these methods were suitable for the investigated glasses and the results were highly reliable. Notably, for the S8 sample, the Eg (201.1 ± 11.6~209.6 ± 12.3 kJ/mol) > Ec (188.7 ± 10.7~198.3 ± 6.9 kJ/mol), implying that the energy barrier to be overcome for glass transition was lower than that for crystallization [44]. Furthermore, the Ec < Ep demonstrated that the grain growth behavior was more difficult than the nucleation process under non-isothermal crystallization [45].

3.5. Crystallization Products

The XRD patterns of the S8 amorphous sample under different annealed temperatures are shown in Figure 5a. When the annealed temperature increased to 513 K (~Tc) for 5 min, four Bragg peaks near 2θ = 28.1°, 40.3°, 49.8° and 58.2° were imposed on the amorphous broad peaks, corresponding to the standard pattern of the SnTe crystalline phase, which was defined as the primary crystalline phase. As shown in Figure 5b, many small crystal particles were clearly observed as precipitated and distributed in the sample. The SAED patterns presented amorphous rings and diffraction spots in Figure 5c, matching well with the crystalline SnTe phase, further confirming the coexistence of amorphous matrix and crystalline phase.
As the annealing temperature increased, more crystal diffraction peaks were detected precipitating from the amorphous background, and the intensity of the diffraction peaks increased significantly, indicating that the S8 sample was highly crystallized and the crystalline products were detected as the SnTe and Ga6SnTe10 phases. When the annealed temperature increased to 533 K (>Tp1), rod-shaped and round particles with a size of approximately 100 nm were distributed in the matrix (Figure 5d). The SAED patterns (Figure 5g) presented bright and sharp diffraction rings and matched well with the poly-crystalline SnTe and Ga6SnTe10 phases, which were consistent with the XRD results of the annealed sample.
Recently, lead-free SnTe-based compounds were demonstrated to be promising TE materials due to their low toxicity and excellent electrical conductivity [46,47]. However, high thermal conductivity and low Seebeck coefficient devalue their TE application. Inversely, SnTe-based amorphous alloys exhibited extremely low thermal conductivity and high Seebeck coefficients but poor electrical conductivity [12]. The SnTe-based glass-ceramics precipitated with the stable SnTe crystalline phase are thus anticipated to present a combination of low thermal conductivity, high Seebeck coefficient and moderate electrical conductivity, which would be beneficial in achieving the high-performance TE materials. Therefore, the S8 glass-ceramics might provide a reliable reference for the preparation of high-performance TE glass-ceramics materials.

4. Conclusions

The glass transition characteristics, crystallization kinetics and micro-structure evolutions of the newly developed [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx tellurium-based alloys were systematically investigated in this paper.
The [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx amorphous alloys were prepared using the melt-spun method, with a linear velocity of 40 m/s and injection pressure of 20 kPa under an Ar atmosphere.
The glass-forming region was identified in the range of x = 0 to 10 mol%.
Tg and Tc decreased monotonically with the increasing Sn content in the entire compositional range, resulting in the decrease in ΔT from 33 K (S2) to 23 K (S10).
For the S8 amorphous sample, the activation energies determined by the Kissinger and Ozawa equations were Eg (201.1~209.6 kJ/mol), Ec (188.7~198.3 kJ/mol), Ep1 (229.8~240.1 kJ/mol) and Ep2 (264.2~272.6 kJ/mol), respectively.
The crystalline products were identified as the SnTe phase (primary crystalline phase) and Ga6SnTe10 phase, which are promising candidates for the development of high-performance TE glass-ceramic materials.

Author Contributions

H.Z.: Methodology, Investigation, Formal analysis, Writing-original draft. Y.Z.: Supervision, Data curation, Funding acquisition, Writing-review & editing. G.L.: Supervision, Funding acquisition, Writing-review & editing. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by the open research fund of Songshan Lake Materials Laboratory (Grant No. 2022SLABFK01); the Natural Science Foundation of Henan Province (Grant No. 222300420161); the Province Science and Technology of Henan (Grant No. 202102310554) and the Postdoctoral Research Grant in Henan Province (Grant No. 202102081).

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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Figure 1. (a) XRD patterns of the melt-spun [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx samples (x = 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 15%), the TEM image (b) and corresponding SAED pattern (c) for S8 sample.
Figure 1. (a) XRD patterns of the melt-spun [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx samples (x = 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 15%), the TEM image (b) and corresponding SAED pattern (c) for S8 sample.
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Figure 2. (a) Heat flow traces of the melt-spun [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx samples (x = 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10%) and (b) composition dependence of the glass transition temperature Tg (Green triangle), the crystallization onset temperature Tc (Red square) and the supercooled liquid region ΔT (Blue circle).
Figure 2. (a) Heat flow traces of the melt-spun [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx samples (x = 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10%) and (b) composition dependence of the glass transition temperature Tg (Green triangle), the crystallization onset temperature Tc (Red square) and the supercooled liquid region ΔT (Blue circle).
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Figure 3. (a) Non-isothermal DSC curves at different heating rates (10, 20, 25 and 30 K/min) and (b) the relationship between characteristic temperatures Tg, Tc, Tp1 and Tp versus ln(β) of the S8 amorphous samples.
Figure 3. (a) Non-isothermal DSC curves at different heating rates (10, 20, 25 and 30 K/min) and (b) the relationship between characteristic temperatures Tg, Tc, Tp1 and Tp versus ln(β) of the S8 amorphous samples.
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Figure 4. (a) Kissinger plots of ln(T2/β) versus 1000/T and (b) Ozawa plots of ln(β) versus 1000/T for the S8 amorphous samples.
Figure 4. (a) Kissinger plots of ln(T2/β) versus 1000/T and (b) Ozawa plots of ln(β) versus 1000/T for the S8 amorphous samples.
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Figure 5. XRD patterns (a), the TEM image (bd) and corresponding SAED pattern (eg) of S8 amorphous sample under different annealed temperatures.
Figure 5. XRD patterns (a), the TEM image (bd) and corresponding SAED pattern (eg) of S8 amorphous sample under different annealed temperatures.
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Table 1. The characteristic temperatures Tg, Tc, Tp1, Tp2 and ΔT for the [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx amorphous samples (x = 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10).
Table 1. The characteristic temperatures Tg, Tc, Tp1, Tp2 and ΔT for the [(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]100-x-Snx amorphous samples (x = 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10).
SamplesCompositionTg (K)Tc (K)Tp1(K)Tp2 (K)ΔT (K)
S2[(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]98-Sn2502535548-33
S4[(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]96-Sn449952953754730
S6[(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]94-Sn649452252954628
S8[(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]92-Sn848851452554526
S10[(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]90-Sn1048150451454323
Table 2. The values of Tg, Tc, Tp1, Tp2 and ΔT for S8 amorphous sample at different heating rates.
Table 2. The values of Tg, Tc, Tp1, Tp2 and ΔT for S8 amorphous sample at different heating rates.
Heating Rate
(K/min)
[(Ga2Te3)34(SnTe)66]92-Sn8
Tg (K)Tc (K)Tp1 (K)Tp2 (K)ΔT (K)
1048250851853926
2048851452554526
2549151852754727
3049252052854928
Table 3. The calculated apparent activation energy of the S8 amorphous samples by different methods.
Table 3. The calculated apparent activation energy of the S8 amorphous samples by different methods.
Activation Energy (kJ mol−1)
EquationEgEcEp1Epi
Kissinger201.1 ± 11.6188.7 ± 10.7229.8 ± 13.9264.2 ± 7.3
Ozawa209.6 ± 12.3198.3 ± 6.9240.1 ± 14.7272.6 ± 7.1
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Zhang, H.; Zhang, Y.; Li, G. A Comprehensive Study of Sn-Ga2Te3-SnTe Amorphous Alloys: Glass Formation and Crystallization Kinetics. Metals 2023, 13, 532. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/met13030532

AMA Style

Zhang H, Zhang Y, Li G. A Comprehensive Study of Sn-Ga2Te3-SnTe Amorphous Alloys: Glass Formation and Crystallization Kinetics. Metals. 2023; 13(3):532. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/met13030532

Chicago/Turabian Style

Zhang, Huan, Yaqi Zhang, and Gong Li. 2023. "A Comprehensive Study of Sn-Ga2Te3-SnTe Amorphous Alloys: Glass Formation and Crystallization Kinetics" Metals 13, no. 3: 532. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/met13030532

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