TY - JOUR AB - In the quest for more efficient thermoelectric material able to convert thermal to electrical energy and vice versa, composites that combine a semiconductor host having a large Seebeck coefficient with metal nanodomains that provide phonon scattering and free charge carriers are particularly appealing. Here, we present our experimental results on the thermal and electrical transport properties of PbS-metal composites produced by a versatile particle blending procedure, and where the metal work function allows injecting electrons to the intrinsic PbS host. We compare the thermoelectric performance of composites with microcrystalline or nanocrystalline structures. The electrical conductivity of the microcrystalline host can be increased several orders of magnitude with the metal inclusion, while relatively high Seebeck coefficient can be simultaneously conserved. On the other hand, in nanostructured materials, the host crystallites are not able to sustain a band bending at its interface with the metal, becoming flooded with electrons. This translates into even higher electrical conductivities than the microcrystalline material, but at the expense of lower Seebeck coefficient values. AU - Liu, Yu AU - Cadavid, Doris AU - Ibanez Sabate, Maria AU - Ortega, Silvia AU - Márti Sánchez, Sara AU - Dobrozhan, Oleksander AU - Kovalenko, Maksym AU - Arbiol, Jordi AU - Cabot, Andreu ID - 383 JF - Applied Physics Letters TI - Thermoelectric properties of semiconductor-metal composites produced by particle blending VL - 4 ER -