RESUMO
Materials with an extreme lattice thermal conductivity (κl) are indispensable for thermal energy management applications. Layered materials provide an avenue for designing such functional materials due to their intrinsic bonding heterogeneity. Therefore, a microscopic understanding of the crystal structure, bonding, anharmonic lattice dynamics, and phonon transport properties is critically important for layered materials. Alkaline-earth halofluorides exhibit anisotropy from their layered crystal structure, which is strongly determined by axial bond(s), and it is attributed to the large axial ratio (c/a > 2) for CaBrF, CaIF, and SrIF, in which Br/I acts as a rattler, as evidenced from potential energy curves and phonon density of states. The low axial (c/a) ratio leads to relatively isotropic κl values in the BaXF (X = Cl, Br, I) series. MXF (M = Ca, Sr, Ba) compounds exhibit highly anisotropic (a large phonon transport anisotropy ratio of 10.95 for CaIF) to isotropic (a small phonon transport anisotropy ratio of 1.49 for BaBrF) κl values despite their iso-structure. Moreover, ultralow κl (<1 W/m K) values have been predicted for CaBrF, CaIF, and SrIF in the out-of-plane direction due to weak van der Waals (vdWs) bonding. Overall, this comprehensive study on MXF compounds provides insights into designing low κl layered materials with a large axial ratio by fine-tuning out-of-plane bonding from ionic to vdWs bonding.
RESUMO
Understanding the interplay between various design strategies (for instance, bonding heterogeneity and lone pair induced anharmonicity) to achieve ultralow lattice thermal conductivity (κl) is indispensable for discovering novel functional materials for thermal energy applications. In the present study, we investigate layered PbXF (X = Cl, Br, I), which offers bonding heterogeneity through the layered crystal structure, anharmonicity through the Pb2+ 6s2 lone pair, and phonon softening through the mass difference between F and Pb/X. The weak interlayer van der Waals bonding and the strong intralayer ionic bonding with partial covalent bonding result in a significant bonding heterogeneity and a poor phonon transport in the out-of-plane direction. Large average Grüneisen parameters (≥2.5) demonstrate strong anharmonicity. The computed phonon dispersions show flat bands, which suggest short phonon lifetimes, especially for PbIF. Enhanced Born effective charges are due to cross-band-gap hybridization. PbIF shows lattice instability at a small volume expansion of 0.1%. The κl values obtained by the two channel transport model are 20-50% higher than those obtained by solving the Boltzmann transport equation. Overall, ultralow κl values are found at 300 K, especially for PbIF. We propose that the interplay of bonding heterogeneity, lone pair induced anharmonicity, and constituent elements with high mass difference aids the design of low κl materials for thermal energy applications.