Combining direct ink writing with reactive melt infiltration to create architectured thermoelectric legs
We present a new additive-reactive synthesis method where inks – cast into molds or 3D-additively extruded into architectured shapes – are reacted into intermetallic thermoelectric compounds. The new method, as demonstrated for equiatomic TiNiSn, combines: (i) extrusion printing (or casting) of inks containing Ni and Ti powders, (ii) debinding and reactive sintering to form a porous NiTi network, (iii) network infiltration with liquid Sn and subsequent reaction to synthesize the TiNiSn phase. Thin plates, created through this method, show high phase purity and low residual porosity. A thermoelectric figure of merit = 0.47 ± 0.05 is achieved at 800 K, within the broad range of values ( = 0.3–1.0) reported for TiNiSn created via traditional powder hot-pressing methods. Layered TiNiSn microlattices – after 3D ink-extrusion printing and infiltration – exhibit high relative densities and minimal undesirable secondary phase content, with a Seebeck coefficient on par with the ink-cast TiNiSn plates, demonstrating that thermoelectric legs with far-ranging architectural freedom can be created additively with this novel reactive manufacturing method. Numerous other thermoelectric (and other) compounds, currently limited to basic geometries due to brittleness, are amenable to this new method based on a sequence of reactive sintering/infiltration of cast or ink-extruded precursors.