Abstract: | Materials with high zT over a wide temperature range are essential for thermoelectric applications. n‐Type Mg3Sb2‐based compounds have been shown to achieve high zT at 700 K, but their performance at low temperatures (<500 K) is compromised due to their highly resistive grain boundaries. Syntheses and optimization processes to mitigate this grain‐boundary effect has been limited due to loss of Mg, which hinders a sample's n‐type dopability. A Mg‐vapor anneal processing step that grows a sample's grain size and preserves its n‐type carrier concentration during annealing is demonstrated. The electrical conductivity and mobility of the samples with large grain size follows a phonon‐scattering‐dominated T?3/2 trend over a large temperature range, further supporting the conclusion that the temperature‐activated mobility in Mg3Sb2‐based materials is caused by resistive grain boundaries. The measured Hall mobility of electrons reaches 170 cm2 V?1 s?1 in annealed 800 °C sintered Mg3 + δSb1.49Bi0.5Te0.01, the highest ever reported for Mg3Sb2‐based thermoelectric materials. In particular, a sample with grain size >30 mm has a zT 0.8 at 300 K, which is comparable to commercial thermoelectric materials used at room temperature (n‐type Bi2Te3) while reaching zT 1.4 at 700 K, allowing applications over a wider temperature scale. |