Lone-Electron-Pair Micelles Strengthen Bond Anharmonicity in MnPb16Sb14S38 Complex Sulfosalt Leading to Ultralow Thermal Conductivity
Author(s) -
Lamia Dawahre,
Ruiming Lu,
Honore Djieutedjeu,
Juan Lopez,
Trevor P. Bailey,
Brandon Buchanan,
Zhixiong Yin,
Ctirad Uher,
Pierre F. P. Poudeu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.0c12938
Subject(s) - anharmonicity , materials science , thermal conductivity , grüneisen parameter , debye model , lone pair , phonon scattering , scattering , phonon , condensed matter physics , electron , lattice (music) , heat capacity , bond length , thermodynamics , crystal structure , crystallography , thermal expansion , molecule , chemistry , physics , optics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , composite material , acoustics , metallurgy
Designing crystalline solids in which intrinsically and extremely low lattice thermal conductivity mainly arises from their unique bonding nature rather than structure complexity and/or atomic disorder could promote thermal energy manipulation and utilization for applications ranging from thermoelectric energy conversion to thermal barrier coatings. Here, we report an extremely low lattice thermal conductivity of ∼0.34 W m -1 K -1 at 300 K in the new complex sulfosalt MnPb 16 Sb 14 S 38 . We attribute the ultralow lattice thermal conductivity to a synergistic combination of scattering mechanisms involving (1) strong bond anharmonicity in various structural building units, owing to the presence of stereoactive lone-electron-pair (LEP) micelles and (2) phonon scattering at the interfaces between building units of increasing size and complexity. Remarkably, low-temperature heat capacity measurement revealed a C p value of 0.206 J g -1 K -1 a T > 300 K, which is 22% lower than the Dulong-Petit value (0.274 J g -1 K -1 ). Further analysis of the C p data and sound velocity ( ν = 1834 m s -1 ) measurement yielded Debye temperature values of 161 and 187 K, respectively. The resulting Grüneisen parameter, γ = 1.65, further supports strong bond anharmonicity as the dominant mechanism responsible for the observed extremely low lattice thermal conductivity.
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