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Lattice Thermal Conductivity in Binary Rocksalt and Zincblende Compounds Including Higher-Order Anharmonicity

ORAL

Abstract

Heat conduction plays a critical role in the performance of microelectronic and energy-conversion devices. To meet the cooling demands of microprocessors and the efficiency of energy convertors, researchers are particularly interested in identifying semiconducting materials with extreme thermal conductivities. Surprisingly, these have been discovered in binary cubic compounds. A comprehensive understanding of their underlying heat transfer mechanism is therefore of fundamental importance. Here, we compute the thermal transport properties of 37 binary rocksalt and zincblende compounds and study how their thermal transport properties are affected by quartic anharmonicity. We find that including quartic anharmonicity always decreases the lattice thermal conductivity in zincblendes but can either increase or decrease the conductivity in rocksalts. Among notable examples, we show that four-phonon scattering is unprecedentedly strong in the zincblende mercury telluride, and strong phonon scattering leads to a possible breakdown of the phonon gas model in the rocksalt silver chloride. Our results pave the way for an in-depth understanding of heat transfer in a broad class of technologically important compounds, which may guide future engineering.

Presenters

  • Yi Xia

    Northwestern University

Authors

  • Yi Xia

    Northwestern University

  • Vinay Ishwar Hegde

    Citrine Informatics

  • Koushik Pal

    Northwestern University

  • Xia Hua

    Northwestern University

  • Dale Gaines II

    Northwestern University

  • Shane Patel

    Northwestern University

  • Jiangang He

    Northwestern University

  • Muratahan Aykol

    Toyota Research Institute, Energy Technologies Area, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Christopher Wolverton

    Northwestern University, Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University