Anisotropic Anharmonicity Dictates the Thermal Conductivity of Gallium Oxide ($\beta-Ga_2O_3$)
Abdulaziz Alkandari, Zherui Han, Ziqi Guo, Thomas Beechem, Xiulin Ruan

TL;DR
This study investigates the anisotropic thermal conductivity of $eta$-Ga$_2$O$_3$ using first-principles calculations, revealing that phonon renormalization and atomic anharmonicity are crucial for accurate modeling and understanding heat dissipation in this material.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive first-principles approach including phonon renormalization and anharmonicity to accurately predict anisotropic thermal conductivity of $eta$-Ga$_2$O$_3$.
Findings
Phonon renormalization resolves previous discrepancies between theory and experiment.
Anisotropic phonon group velocities and lifetimes are significantly affected by anharmonic interactions.
Octahedrally-coordinated gallium atoms exhibit the highest anharmonicity, influencing thermal transport.
Abstract
is a promising material candidate for next-generation high power devices even as its low thermal conductivity () limits utilization due to an inability to sufficiently dissipate heat. Despite its importance, a significant discrepancy persists between experimental results and computational models regarding 's anisotropic thermal conductivity. Specifically, computational results are within experimental error bounds for and while underpredicting , suggesting that the bare phonon models used in literature are missing essential physics related to the anisotropic thermal transport. In response, we compute the anisotropic using first-principles and the Pierels-Boltzmann transport equation (PBTE) under different approximations. For the simplest model, we consider the heat carriers to be harmonic phonons…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGa2O3 and related materials · Magnesium Oxide Properties and Applications
