Intuitive entropic interpretations of the thermoelectric effect in metals predict an isotropic Seebeck coefficient at high temperatures in the incoherent regime even in anisotropic metals since entropy is not directional. $\mathrm{Sr}_2\mathrm{Ru}\mathrm{O}_4$ is an enigmatic material known for a well characterised anisotropic normal state and unconventional superconductivity. Recent ab-initio transport calculations of $\mathrm{Sr}_2\mathrm{Ru}\mathrm{O}_4$ that include the effect of strong electronic correlations predicted an enhanced high-temperature anisotropy of the Seebeck coefficient at temperatures above 300 K, but experimental evidence is missing. From measurements on clean $\mathrm{Sr}_2\mathrm{Ru}\mathrm{O}_4$ single crystals along both crystallographic directions, we find that the Seebeck coefficient becomes increasingly isotropic upon heating towards room temperature as generally expected. Above 300 K, however, $S$ acquires a new anisotropy which rises up to the highest temperatures measured (750 K), in qualitative agreement with calculations. This is a challenge to entropic interpretations and highlights the lack of an intuitive framework to understand the anisotropy of thermopower at high temperatures.
Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures