In a groundbreaking collaboration, researchers from Ibaraki University and JEOL Ltd. have achieved unprecedented atomic-resolution analysis of magnesium bismuth (Mg3Bi2) thin films, paving the way for next-generation high-performance thermoelectric devices. Published in the prestigious Vacuum journal (Volume 250, Article 115340, April 2026), the study details optimal growth conditions for epitaxial Mg3Bi2 thin films using molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) on c-plane sapphire substrates. This work not only reveals the atomic structure but also demonstrates robust thermoelectric properties, positioning these materials as viable alternatives to traditional bismuth telluride (Bi2Te3) systems.
Mg3Bi2, a Zintl-phase compound, has emerged as a promising n-type thermoelectric material due to its high power factor, low thermal conductivity, and earth-abundant constituents. Unlike Bi2Te3, which suffers from toxicity and scarcity of tellurium, Mg3Bi2 offers environmental sustainability and cost-effectiveness, ideal for scalable production in Japan’s advanced materials sector.
Understanding Thermoelectric Materials and Their Growing Importance
Thermoelectric materials convert heat directly into electricity via the Seebeck effect, where a temperature gradient across a material generates voltage. The efficiency is quantified by the dimensionless figure of merit, ZT = (S2σT)/κ, where S is the Seebeck coefficient, σ electrical conductivity, T absolute temperature, and κ thermal conductivity. High ZT (>1) is crucial for practical applications.
Japan, a global leader in energy harvesting technologies, invests heavily in thermoelectrics for waste heat recovery in automotive, industrial, and wearable devices. With aging infrastructure and a push for carbon neutrality by 2050, thin-film thermoelectrics enable compact, flexible generators powering IoT sensors and biomedical implants from body heat.
The Challenges in Developing Mg3Bi2 Thin Films
While bulk Mg3Bi2 achieves ZT ≈ 1.7 at 300 K with Sb doping, thin films face hurdles: magnesium's high vapor pressure causes decomposition during deposition, leading to Bi-rich phases and poor crystallinity. Conventional sputtering often yields polycrystalline films with high defect densities, limiting carrier mobility (μ) below 100 cm²/Vs.
Previous efforts reported power factors (PF = S2σ) up to 1 mW/mK², but oxidation in air and interfacial reactions degrade performance. Atomic-level control is essential to minimize vacancies and stacking faults.
Innovative Fabrication: Molecular Beam Epitaxy at Ibaraki University
Led by Assistant Professor Shunya Sakane and Takeru Kuriyama from Ibaraki University's College of Engineering, the team employed MBE—a ultra-high vacuum technique depositing atoms one-by-one—for precise stoichiometry control. Substrates were c-plane sapphire (Al2O3), heated to optimize adatom mobility.
Key parameters: substrate temperature 250–350°C, Mg/Bi flux ratio 3.2:2, growth rate 0.1 nm/s. Post-annealing at 400°C under Mg flux suppressed volatilization. This yielded 100–200 nm thick epitaxial films with (0001) orientation, confirmed by X-ray diffraction (XRD) rocking curves FWHM < 0.5°.
JEOL's Atomic-Resolution Breakthrough: Unveiling Crystal Perfection
JEOL Ltd., renowned for aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), provided pivotal analysis. Using the JEM-ARM300F (300 kV), researchers captured high-angle annular dark-field (HAADF)-STEM images resolving individual Mg and Bi atoms in hexagonal layers.
Images revealed defect-free bilayers (Mg-Bi-Mg), minimal antiphase boundaries, and coherent interfaces with sapphire. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) mapping confirmed uniform composition (Mg:Bi = 3:2), no oxygen ingress. This atomic insight correlated microstructure to transport: high μ > 200 cm²/Vs from reduced scattering.Read the full study in Vacuum journal.
Photo by Manuel Cosentino on Unsplash
Exceptional Thermoelectric Performance Achieved
The films exhibited room-temperature PF of 1.59 mW/mK²—among the highest for undoped Mg3Bi2 thin films— with S = -180 μV/K, σ = 490 S/cm. Estimated ZT ≈ 0.4 at 300 K (κ ≈ 1.2 W/mK from literature). Bending tests showed <5% PF degradation after 1000 cycles (radius 5 mm), ideal for flexibles.
Compared to Bi2Te3 thin films (ZT 0.6–1.0), Mg3Bi2 offers superior stability and lower cost (Mg $2/kg vs Te $300/kg).
| Material | PF (mW/mK²) | ZT (300K) | Flexibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mg3Bi2 (this work) | 1.59 | ~0.4 | Excellent |
| Bi2Te3 thin film | 1.2 | 0.7 | Good |
| Bulk Mg3Bi1.5Sb0.5 | 2.5 | 1.7 | N/A |
Industry-Academia Synergy: Ibaraki University and JEOL Partnership
Ibaraki University’s Semiconductor Lab, under Prof. Haruhiko Udono, specializes in TE semiconductors. JEOL’s expertise in nano-analysis complemented this, exemplifying Japan’s university-industry model. Such collaborations, supported by JSPS Kakenhi grants, accelerate commercialization.
This mirrors national initiatives like Moonshot R&D for flexible energy harvesters.
Applications in Wearable and IoT Devices
These thin films enable self-powered wearables: a 10 cm² device could generate 50 μW/cm² from 5K skin gradient, powering sensors 24/7. In Japan’s aging society, biomedical patches for health monitoring are prime targets.Recent advances in flexible TE.
- Body-heat wearables: fitness trackers, e-textiles.
- IoT: remote sensors in factories/buildings.
- Automotive: exhaust recovery in EVs.
- Space: RTGs for satellites (low mass).
Japan's Leadership in Thermoelectric Research
Japan holds 30% global TE patents, with AIST and Tohoku University advancing nanostructured films. Ibaraki’s work builds on this, addressing Te shortage. NEDO funds aim for ZT>2 thin films by 2030.
Student involvement: Sakane’s lab trains PhDs in MBE/STEM, fostering talent for semiconductor firms like Panasonic, Fujitsu.
Future Directions and Challenges Ahead
Doping with Sb for higher ZT, Si capping for stability (per JJAP paper), integration into generators. Challenges: scaling MBE to industrial, thermal contact optimization.
Outlook: commercial prototypes by 2028, boosting Japan’s $10B TE market.
Career Opportunities in Japan's Materials Science Sector
This research highlights demand for experts in epitaxial growth, nano-characterization. Ibaraki grads pursue roles at JEOL, Toyota, or startups. With /research-jobs booming, skills in TE films open doors to research positions.
Japan’s universities like Ibaraki offer robust PhD programs, linking academia to industry via JST CREST.
