We present measurements of resistivity and thermopower S of Fe1+x Te1-y Se y single crystalline samples with y=0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, and 0.45 in zero field and in a magnetic field B=8 T. We find that the shape of thermopower curves appears quite peculiar in respect to that measured in other Fe-based superconducting families. We propose a qualitative analysis of the temperature behavior of S, where the samples are described as almost compensated semimetals: different electron and hole bands with similar carrier concentrations compete and their relative contribution to the thermoelectric transport depends on the respective filling, mobility, and coupling with phonons. For y 0.2, superconductivity occurs and the optimum Se-doping level for a maximum Tc of 13 K turns out to be y=0.3. At low temperatures, evidence of a contribution to S by an excitation-drag mechanism is found while at high temperatures a strikingly flat behavior of S is explained within a narrow-band Hubbard model.
Seebeck effect in Fe(1+x)Te(1-y)Se(y) single crystals
I Pallecchi;G Lamura;M Putti;
2009
Abstract
We present measurements of resistivity and thermopower S of Fe1+x Te1-y Se y single crystalline samples with y=0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, and 0.45 in zero field and in a magnetic field B=8 T. We find that the shape of thermopower curves appears quite peculiar in respect to that measured in other Fe-based superconducting families. We propose a qualitative analysis of the temperature behavior of S, where the samples are described as almost compensated semimetals: different electron and hole bands with similar carrier concentrations compete and their relative contribution to the thermoelectric transport depends on the respective filling, mobility, and coupling with phonons. For y 0.2, superconductivity occurs and the optimum Se-doping level for a maximum Tc of 13 K turns out to be y=0.3. At low temperatures, evidence of a contribution to S by an excitation-drag mechanism is found while at high temperatures a strikingly flat behavior of S is explained within a narrow-band Hubbard model.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


