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Breaking the Minimum Limit of Thermal Conductivity of Mg 3 Sb 2 Thermoelectric Mediated by Chemical Alloying Induced Lattice Instability.

Jinsuo HuJianbo ZhuXingyan DongMuchun GuoYuxin SunWenjing ShiYuke ZhuHao WuFengkai GuoYi-Xin ZhangZhen-Hua GeQian ZhangZihang LiuWei CaiJiehe Sui
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Thermal properties strongly affect the applications of functional materials, such as thermal management, thermal barrier coatings, and thermoelectrics. Thermoelectric (TE) materials must have a low lattice thermal conductivity to maintain a temperature gradient to generate the voltage. Traditional strategies for minimizing the lattice thermal conductivity mainly rely on introduced multiscale defects to suppress the propagation of phonons. Here, the origin of the anomalously low lattice thermal conductivity is uncovered in Cd-alloyed Mg 3 Sb 2 Zintl compounds through complementary bonding analysis. First, the weakened chemical bonds and the lattice instability induced by the antibonding states of 5p-4d levels between Sb and Cd triggered giant anharmonicity and consequently increased the phonon scattering. Moreover, the bond heterogeneity also augmented Umklapp phonon scatterings. Second, the weakened bonds and heavy element alloying softened the phonon mode and significantly decreased the group velocity. Thus, an ultralow lattice thermal conductivity of ≈0.33 W m -1 K -1 at 773 K is obtained, which is even lower than the predicated minimum value. Eventually, Na 0.01 Mg 1.7 Cd 1.25 Sb 2 displays a high ZT of ≈0.76 at 773 K, competitive with most of the reported values. Based on the complementary bonding analysis, the work provides new means to control thermal transport properties through balancing the lattice stability and instability.
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