RESUMO
Yb0.4Co4Sb12, being a well-studied system, has shown notably high thermoelectric performance due to the Yb filler atom-driven large concentration of charge carriers and lower value of thermal conductivity. In this work, the thermoelectric performance of YbzCo4-xTixSb12 (where z = 0, x = 0 and z = 0.4, x = 0, 0.04, and 0.08) upon Ti doping prepared by the melt-quenched-annealing followed by spark plasma sintering (SPS) has been studied in the temperature range of 300-700 K. Addition of Yb and doping of donor Ti at the Co site simultaneously increase the electrical conductivity to 1453.5 S/cm at 300 K, which ultimately boosts the power factor as high as â¼4.3 mW/(m·K2) at 675 K in Yb0.4Co3.96Ti0.04Sb12. Adversely, a significant reduction in thermal conductivity is obtained from â¼7.69 W/(m·K) (Co4Sb12) to â¼3.50 W/(m·K) (Yb0.4Co3.96Ti0.04Sb12) at â¼300 K. As a result, the maximum zT is achieved as â¼0.85 at 623 K with high hardness of 584 HV for the composition of Yb0.4Co3.96Ti0.04Sb12, which demonstrates it to be an efficient material suitable for intermediate temperature thermoelectric applications.
RESUMO
A new amperometric biosensor, based on deposition of glucose oxidase (GOD) onto crystalline gold (Au) nanoparticle modified multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWNT) electrode, is presented. MWNTs have been synthesized by catalytic chemical vapor decomposition of acetylene over rare-earth-based AB2 (DyNi2) alloy hydride catalyst. Purified MWNTs have been decorated with nanocrystalline Au metal clusters using a simple chemical reduction method. The characterization of metal-decorated CNTs has been done using X-ray diffraction analysis, scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), high-resolution TEM, and energy-dispersive X-ray analysis. Amperometric biosensor fabricated by depositing GOD over Nafion-solubilized Au-MWNT electrode retains its biocatalytic activity and offers fast and sensitive glucose quantification. The performance of the biosensor has been studied using cyclic voltammetry, amperometry, and hydrodynamic voltammetry, and the results have been discussed. The fabricated glucose biosensor exhibits a linear response up to 22 mM glucose and a detection limit of 20 microM.