The Origin of the Glass-like Thermal Conductivity in Crystalline Metal-Organic Frameworks
Yanguang Zhou, Yufei Gao, Sebastian Volz

TL;DR
This study reveals that the glass-like thermal conductivity in crystalline metal-organic frameworks results from strong phonon scattering due to mass differences and cavity structures, involving both propagating and non-propagating vibrational modes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that ultralow thermal conductivity in metal-organic frameworks arises from intrinsic phonon scattering, challenging the traditional phonon transport model for these materials.
Findings
Ultralow thermal conductivity caused by strong phonon scattering.
Presence of both propagating and non-propagating vibrational modes.
Thermal conductivity temperature dependence due to mode competition.
Abstract
It is textbookly regarded that phonons, i.e., an energy quantum of propagating lattice waves, are the main heat carriers in perfect crystals. As a result, in many crystals, e.g., bulk silicon, the temperature-dependent thermal conductivity shows the classical 1/T relationship because of the dominant Umklapp phonon-phonon scattering in the systems. However, the thermal conductivity of many crystalline metal-organic frameworks is very low and shows no, a weakly negative and even a weakly positive temperature dependence (glass-like thermal conductivity). It has been in debate whether the thermal transport can be still described by phonons in metal-organic frameworks. Here, by studying two typical systems, i.e., crystal zeolitic imidazolate framework-4 (cZIF-4) and crystal zeolitic imidazolate framework-62 (c-ZIF62), we prove that the ultralow thermal conductivity in metal-organic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMachine Learning in Materials Science · Hydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis · X-ray Diffraction in Crystallography
