Ultralow Lattice Thermal Conductivity Induced by Quasi-Chain Configuration in Rb2Se3
Tiantian Jia, Yongsen Tang, Yongsheng Zhang

TL;DR
This study uncovers how a quasi-chain structure in Rb2Se3 leads to ultralow lattice thermal conductivity below 0.2 W/mK at 300 K, driven by strong anharmonicity and localized rigid units.
Contribution
It reveals the fundamental mechanism of ultralow thermal conductivity in Rb2Se3, highlighting the role of covalent Se trimers and soft Rb atoms, providing a universal design framework.
Findings
Lattice thermal conductivity below 0.2 W/mK at 300 K.
Rigid Se-Se-Se trimers induce localized vibrations.
Strong anharmonicity and rattling behavior dominate phonon transport.
Abstract
Alkali metal-based compounds have garnered significant attention due to their exceptionally low lattice thermal conductivity, which is crucial for applications in thermoelectric energy conversion and thermal barrier coatings. However, the fundamental mechanisms underlying such ultralow lattice thermal conductivity remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigate the intrinsic origins of the ultralow lattice thermal conductivity in the alkali metal-based ionic compound Rb2Se3, which exhibits a simple orthorhombic structure. By employing first-principles density functional theory (DFT) and solving the phonon Boltzmann transport equation (BTE), we reveal that Rb2Se3 achieves lattice thermal conductivity values below 0.2 W/mK along all crystallographic directions at 300 K. Our analysis uncovers a unique quasi-chain configuration within the crystal structure, characterized by strongly…
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