
G. Jeffrey Snyder
· Professor of Materials Science & EngineeringNorthwestern University · Chemical Engineering
Active 1954–2024
About
G. Jeffrey Snyder is a Professor of Materials Science & Engineering at Northwestern University. His research focuses on thermoelectric materials and devices, including the characterization and analysis of electrical and thermal interface resistance in semiconductors, grain boundary complexion engineering for high thermoelectric performance, band structure engineering, and the development of Zintl materials for thermoelectric power generation. He is involved in the synthesis, characterization, and application of nanomaterials for thermoelectrics, utilizing bulk processing methods suitable for commercialization. Professor Snyder's work also encompasses solid-state physics and thermodynamics of thermoelectric materials, predictive modeling of electronic and thermal transport properties, and hierarchical engineering principles for thermal to electric power generation and thermal management systems. His contributions include demonstrating high thermoelectric efficiency in various systems, exploring Zintl phases for thermoelectric applications, and developing microfabrication techniques for thermoelectric MEMS devices. His research aims to increase energy efficiency through waste heat recovery, thermal insulation, and cogeneration of heat and electricity.
Research topics
- Thermodynamics
- Physics
- Materials science
- Composite material
- Condensed matter physics
- Engineering
- Electrical engineering
- Mechanical engineering
- Optoelectronics
- Engineering physics
- Crystallography
- Optics
- Chemistry
- Nanotechnology
- Geometry
- Biology
- Ecology
- Mathematical analysis
- Mathematics
Selected publications
Microscale Imaging of Thermal Conductivity Suppression at Grain Boundaries
Advanced Materials · 2023 · 51 citations
- Materials science
- Composite material
- Thermodynamics
Grain-boundary engineering is an effective strategy to tune the thermal conductivity of materials, leading to improved performance in thermoelectric, thermal-barrier coatings, and thermal management applications. Despite the central importance to thermal transport, a clear understanding of how grain boundaries modulate the microscale heat flow is missing, owing to the scarcity of local investigations. Here, thermal imaging of individual grain boundaries is demonstrated in thermoelectric SnTe via spatially resolved frequency-domain thermoreflectance. Measurements with microscale resolution reveal local suppressions in thermal conductivity at grain boundaries. Also, the grain-boundary thermal resistance - extracted by employing a Gibbs excess approach - is found to be correlated with the grain-boundary misorientation angle. Extracting thermal properties, including thermal boundary resistances, from microscale imaging can provide comprehensive understanding of how microstructure affects heat transport, crucially impacting the materials design of high-performance thermal-management and energy-conversion devices.
Distributed and localized cooling with thermoelectrics
Joule · 2021 · 70 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Engineering physics
- Mechanical engineering
- Engineering
Thermal resistance at a twist boundary and a semicoherent heterointerface
Physical review. B./Physical review. B · 2021 · 22 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Materials science
- Condensed matter physics
- Engineering physics
Traditional models of interfacial phonon scattering, including the acoustic mismatch model and diffuse mismatch model, take into account the bulk properties of the material surrounding the interface, but not the atomic structure and properties of the interface itself. Here, we derive a theoretical formalism for the phonon scattering at a dislocation grid, or two interpenetrating orthogonal arrays of dislocations, as this is the most stable structure of both the symmetric twist boundary and semicoherent heterointerface. With this approach, we are able to separately examine the contribution to thermal resistance due to the step-function change in acoustic properties and due to interfacial dislocation strain fields, which induces diffractive scattering. Both low-angle Si-Si twist boundaries and the Si-Ge heterointerfaces are considered here and compared to previous experimental and simulation results. This work indicates that scattering from misfit dislocation strain fields doubles the thermal boundary resistance of Si-Ge heterointerfaces compared to scattering due to acoustic mismatch alone. Scattering from grain boundary dislocation strain fields is predicted to dominate the thermal boundary resistance of Si-Si twist boundaries. This physical treatment can guide the thermal design of devices by quantifying the relative importance of interfacial strain fields, which can be engineered via fabrication and processing methods, versus acoustic mismatch, which is fixed for a given interface. Additionally, this approach captures experimental and simulation trends such as the dependence of thermal boundary resistance on the grain boundary angle and interfacial strain energy.
Journal of the American Chemical Society · 2020 · 284 citations
- Chemistry
- Condensed matter physics
- Crystallography
.
Energy & Environmental Science · 2020 · 146 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Materials science
- Composite material
- Nanotechnology
Expression of energy filtering to boost thermoelectric performance through grain boundary engineering utilising graphene.
Advanced Materials · 2020 · 906 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Materials science
- Condensed matter physics
- Optoelectronics
. Weighted mobility analysis can elucidate the electronic structure and scattering mechanisms in materials and is particularly helpful in understanding and optimizing thermoelectric systems.
Stretchable fabric generates electric power from woven thermoelectric fibers
Nature Communications · 2020 · 381 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Materials science
- Composite material
- Optoelectronics
for a temperature difference of 44 K and excellent stretchability (~80% strain) with no output degradation. The compatibility between body movement and sustained power supply is further displayed. The generators described here are true textiles, proving active thermoelectrics can be woven into various fabric architectures for sensing, energy harvesting, or thermal management.
Recent grants
Frequent coauthors
- 127 shared
Umut Aydemir
- 104 shared
Heng Wang
Anhui University of Science and Technology
- 95 shared
Eric S. Toberer
- 83 shared
Zachary M. Gibbs
California Institute of Technology
- 71 shared
Guodong Li
- 66 shared
Yu Pan
Chongqing University
- 64 shared
Stephen Dongmin Kang
- 63 shared
Alex Zevalkink
Labs
Snyder LabPI
Education
- 1997
Ph. D., Applied Physics
Stanford University
- 1993
Visiting Researcher, Abteilung Simon
Max-Planck-Institut für Festkörperforschung
- 1991
BS, Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics
Cornell University
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