MRS Meetings and Events

 

SF03.08.02 2023 MRS Spring Meeting

High-Pressure Thermal Transport Physics in Extreme Materials

When and Where

Apr 12, 2023
10:30am - 10:45am

Marriott Marquis, B2 Level, Golden Gate A

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Suixuan Li1,Zihao Qin1,Huan Wu1,Man Li1,Yongjie Hu1

University of California, Los Angeles1

Abstract

Suixuan Li1,Zihao Qin1,Huan Wu1,Man Li1,Yongjie Hu1

University of California, Los Angeles1
High pressure represents extreme environments and provides opportunities for materials discovery. Thermal transport under high hydrostatic pressure has been investigated for more than 100 years and all measurements of crystals so far have indicated a monotonically increasing lattice thermal conductivity. Here we report in situ thermal transport measurements in the newly discovered semiconductor crystal boron arsenide, and observe an anomalous pressure dependence of the thermal conductivity. We use ultrafast optics, Raman spectroscopy and inelastic X-ray scattering measurements to examine the phonon bandstructure evolution of the optical and acoustic branches, as well as thermal conductivity under varied temperatures and pressures up to 32 gigapascals. Using atomistic theory, we attribute the anomalous high-pressure behaviour to competitive heat conduction channels from interactive high-order anharmonicity physics inherent to the unique phonon bandstructure. Our study verifies ab initio theory calculations and we show that the phonon dynamics—resulting from competing three-phonon and four-phonon scattering processes—are beyond those expected from classical models and seen in common materials. This work uses high-pressure spectroscopy combined with atomistic theory as a powerful approach to probe complex phonon physics and provide fundamental insights for understanding microscopic energy transport in materials of extreme properties. <br/>Publication: Suixuan Li, Zihao Qin, Huan Wu, Man Li, Martin Kunz, Ahmet Alatas, Abby Kavner, Yongjie Hu, Anomalous thermal transport under high pressure in boron arsenide. Nature 612, 459–464 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05381-x

Keywords

neutron scattering | spectroscopy | thermal conductivity

Symposium Organizers

Yongjie Hu, University of California, Los Angeles
Lucas Lindsay, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Amy Marconnet, Purdue University
Ivana Savic, Tyndall National Institute

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature