Crystal-liquid duality driven ultralow two-channel thermal conductivity in
-MgAgSb
Li, J.*; Li, X.*; Zhang, Y.*; Zhu, J.*; Zhao, E.*; 古府 麻衣子
; 中島 健次
; Avdeev, M.*; Liu, P.-F.*; Sui, J.*; Zhao, H.*; Wang, F.*; Zhang, J.*
Li, J.*; Li, X.*; Zhang, Y.*; Zhu, J.*; Zhao, E.*; Kofu, Maiko; Nakajima, Kenji; Avdeev, M.*; Liu, P.-F.*; Sui, J.*; Zhao, H.*; Wang, F.*; Zhang, J.*
The desire for intrinsically low lattice thermal conductivity (
) in thermoelectrics motivates numerous efforts on understanding the microscopic mechanisms of heat transport in solids. Here, based on theoretical calculations, we demonstrate that
-MgAgSb hosts low-energy localized phonon bands and avoided crossing of the rattler modes, which coincides with the inelastic neutron scattering result. Using the two-channel lattice dynamical approach, we find, besides the conventional contribution (
70% at 300 K) from particlelike phonons propagating, the coherence contribution dominated by the wavelike tunneling of phonons accounts for
30% of total
at 300 K. By considering dual contributions, our calculated room-temperature
of 0.64 Wm
K
well agrees with the experimental value of 0.63 Wm
K
. More importantly, our computations give a nonstandard
dependence, perfectly explaining the abnormal temperature-trend of
in experiment for
-MgAgSb. By molecular dynamics simulation, we reveal that the structure simultaneously has soft crystalline sublattices with the metavalent bonding and fluctuating liquid-like sublattices with thermally induced large amplitude vibrations. These diverse forms of chemical bonding arouse mixed part-crystal part-liquid state, scatter strongly heat-carrying phonons, and finally produce extremely low
. The fundamental research from this study will accelerate the design of ultralow-
materials for energy-conversion applications.