AI Article Synopsis

  • A new study shows that CuP has a surprisingly high sound speed of 4155 m/s, similar to GaAs, but much lower lattice thermal conductivity at around 4 W/m·K at room temperature.
  • Researchers used neutron scattering and simulations to explore the reasons behind this discrepancy in thermal transport behavior.
  • The findings indicate that Cu atoms in CuP form dimers that vibrate in a unique manner (rattling mode), which disrupts phonon movement and leads to the material's low thermal conductivity.

Article Abstract

A solid with larger sound speeds usually exhibits higher lattice thermal conductivity. Here, we report an exception that CuP has a quite large mean sound speed of 4155 m s, comparable to GaAs, but single crystals show very low lattice thermal conductivity of about 4 W m K at room temperature, one order of magnitude smaller than GaAs. To understand such a puzzling thermal transport behavior, we have thoroughly investigated the atomic structures and lattice dynamics by combining neutron scattering techniques with first-principles simulations. This compound crystallizes in a layered structure where Cu atoms forming dimers are sandwiched in between P atomic networks. In this work, we reveal that Cu atomic dimers vibrate as a rattling mode with frequency around 11 meV, which is manifested to be remarkably anharmonic and strongly scatters acoustic phonons to achieve the low lattice thermal conductivity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7566455PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19044-wDOI Listing

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