Issue 32, 2024

Machine learning-assisted 3D printing of thermoelectric materials of ultrahigh performances at room temperature

Abstract

Thermoelectric energy conversion is an attractive technology for generating electricity from waste heat and using electricity for solid-state cooling. However, conventional manufacturing processes for thermoelectric devices are costly and limited to simple device geometries. This work reports an extrusion printing method to fabricate high-performance thermoelectric materials with complex 3D architectures. By integrating high-throughput experimentation and Bayesian optimization (BO), our approach significantly accelerates the simultaneous search for the optimal ink formulation and printing parameters that deliver high thermoelectric performances while maintaining desired shape fidelity. A Gaussian process regression (GPR)-based machine learning model is employed to expeditiously predict thermoelectric power factor as a function of ink formulation and printing parameters. The printed bismuth antimony telluride (BiSbTe)-based thermoelectric materials under the optimized conditions exhibit an ultrahigh room temperature zT of 1.3, which is by far the highest in the printed thermoelectric materials. The machine learning-guided ink-based printing strategy can be easily generalized to a wide range of functional materials and devices for broad technological applications.

Graphical abstract: Machine learning-assisted 3D printing of thermoelectric materials of ultrahigh performances at room temperature

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 May 2024
Accepted
12 Jul 2024
First published
12 Jul 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2024,12, 21243-21251

Machine learning-assisted 3D printing of thermoelectric materials of ultrahigh performances at room temperature

K. Song, G. Xu, A. N. M. Tanvir, K. Wang, M. O. Bappy, H. Yang, W. Shang, L. Zhou, A. W. Dowling, T. Luo and Y. Zhang, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2024, 12, 21243 DOI: 10.1039/D4TA03062A

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