| Literature DB >> 29422523 |
Hamid Reza Seyf1, Wei Lv1, Andrew Rohskopf1, Asegun Henry2,3,4.
Abstract
Current understanding of phonons is based on the phonon gas model (PGM), which is best rationalized for crystalline materials. However, most of the phonons/modes in disordered materials have a different character and thus may contribute to heat conduction in a fundamentally different way than is described by PGM. For the modes in crystals, which have sinusoidal character, one can separate the modes into two primary categories, namely acoustic and optical modes. However, for the modes in disordered materials, such designations may no longer rigorously apply. Nonetheless, the phase quotient (PQ) is a quantity that can be used to evaluate whether a mode more so shares a distinguishing property of acoustic vibrations manifested as a positive PQ, or a distinguishing property of an optical vibrations manifested as negative PQ. In thinking about this characteristic, there is essentially no intuition regarding the role of positive vs. negative PQ vibrational modes in disordered solids. Given this gap in understanding, herein we studied the respective contributions to thermal conductivity for several disordered solids as a function of PQ. The analysis sheds light on the importance of optical like/negative PQ modes in structurally/compositionally disordered solids, whereas in crystalline materials, the contributions of optical modes are usually small.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29422523 PMCID: PMC5805757 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20704-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Thermal conductivity vs. temperature as compared to experimental data for each material studied herein. The continuous curves are the temperature dependent thermal conductivities obtained from GKMA calculations with error bars showing the standard deviation between independent simulations[25–27], the black symbols are experimental data from refs[29,39–41].
Figure 2PQ verses phonon frequency for InAs and GaAs.
Figure 3Participation ratio and PQ for a-C, a-SiO2, and In0.53Ga0.47As alloy.
The sum of PQ for all modes in each system studied.
| Sum of PQ | Random In0.53Ga0.47As | a-C | a-SiO2 | Crystalline InAs | Crystalline GaAs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive PQ | 1135.41 | 2817.39 | 2049.06 | 1041.17 | 1101.02 |
| Negative PQ | −1076.21 | −3283.06 | −2424.06 | −1046.30 | 1103.3 |
| Net PQ | 59.22 | −465.66 | −374.9 | −5.13 | −2.21 |
Figure 4Thermal conductivity accumulation and density of states verses PQ for a-C, a-SiO2, and In0.53Ga0.47As alloy.
Figure 5The ratio of the percentage of thermal conductivity to percentage of heat capacity associated with positive and negative PQ.