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We often need to use some formulas repeatedly in thermoelectric research.
Although, an efficient built-in equation editor is embedded in MicroSoft Office,
it still takes some time to edit these numerous complex repetitive formulas.
Here, some frequently used and reported formulas are collected, which not only facilitates the use of screenshots,
but also can be easily copied to MicroSoft Office as an embedded equation (see
Appendix: How to use equations in MicroSoft Office
), improving work efficiency. Any bug reports or suggestions are very welcome, which can be discussed at
Issues page.
• H.S. Kim, W. Liu, G. Chen, C. Chu, Z. Ren, Relationship between thermoelectric figure of merit and energy conversion efficiency, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 (27) (2015) 8205-8210. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1510231112
P002: Restructure SPB (RSPB) Model (J. Zhu et al., 2021)
• J. Zhu, X. Zhang, M. Guo, J. Li, J. Hu, S. Cai, W. Cai, Y. Zhang, J. Sui, Restructured single parabolic band model for quick analysis in thermoelectricity, npj computational materials 7 (1) (2021) 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41524-021-00587-5
• G.J. Snyder, A.H. Snyder, Figure of merit zt of a thermoelectric device defined from materials properties, Energy Environ. Sci. 10 (11) (2017) 2280-2283. https://doi.org/10.1039/C7EE02007D.
P004: Thermoelectric compatibility factor (CF) (G.J. Snyder et al., 2003)
• W. Seifert, K. Zabrocki, G.J. Snyder, E. Müller, The compatibility approach in the classical theory of thermoelectricity seen from the perspective of variational calculus, physica status solidi (a) 207 (3) (2010) 760-765. https://doi.org/10.1002/pssa.200925460.
• W. Seifert, V. Pluschke, C. Goupil, K. Zabrocki, E. Müller, G.J. Snyder, Maximum performance in self-compatible thermoelectric elements, J. Mater. Res. 26 (15) (2011) 1933-1939. https://doi.org/10.1557/jmr.2011.139.
Appendix: How to use equations in MicroSoft Office
• Method 1 (Both MicroSoft Word and PPT support)
Right click on the equation, select Copy to Clipboard > TeX Commands.
Select Insert > Equation or press Alt + = in Word or PPT.
Click {}LaTeX to enable LaTeX mode in the Equation ribbon.
Paste (Ctrl + V) and press Enter.
Done.
• Method 2 (Only Word supports)
Right click on the equation, select Copy to Clipboard > MathML Code.