Strong acoustic phonon suppression leads to ultralow thermal conductivity and enhanced thermoelectric performance in BaCuGdTe$_3$
Jyoti Duhan, Chris Wolverton, and Koushik Pal

TL;DR
This study combines first-principles calculations and Boltzmann transport theory to demonstrate that BaCuGdTe$_3$ exhibits ultralow thermal conductivity due to suppressed acoustic phonons, leading to high thermoelectric efficiency.
Contribution
The paper reveals a new layered chalcogenide with ultralow thermal conductivity caused by suppressed phonon modes, and predicts high thermoelectric performance at moderate temperatures.
Findings
$ ilde{ ext{κ}}_l$ $ extasciitilde$ 0.14 W/mK at room temperature
High thermoelectric figure of merit exceeding unity at 400-700 K
Suppressed acoustic phonons due to local distortion and phonon interactions
Abstract
Excitations and scatterings among the quantized lattice vibrations, i.e., phonons, govern the lattice thermal conductivity () in crystalline solids. Therefore, effective modulation of can be achieved through selective manipulation of phonon modes that strongly participate in the heat transport mechanisms. Here, combining accurate first-principles density functional theory calculations and Boltzmann transport theory, we report a layered quaternary chalcogenide semiconductor, BaCuGdTe, which exhibits unusually low ( 0.14 W/mK at room temperature) despite its ordered crystalline structure. Our analysis reveals that the ultralow arises mainly from a strong suppression of acoustic phonon modes induced by local distortion, shear vibrations among the layers, and large acoustic-optical avoided-crossing between phonons, which collectively…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermoelectric Materials and Devices · Thermal properties of materials · Topological Materials and Phenomena
