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Lattice thermal conductivity of TixZryHf1−x−yNiSn half-Heusler alloys calculated from first principles: Key role of nature of phonon modes

Abstract

In spite of their relatively high lattice thermal conductivity κℓ, the XNiSn (X=Ti, Zr, or Hf) half-Heusler compounds are good thermoelectric materials. Previous studies have shown that κℓ can be reduced by sublattice alloying on the X site. To cast light on how the alloy composition affects κℓ, we study this system using the phonon Boltzmann-transport equation within the relaxation time approximation in conjunction with density functional theory. The effect of alloying through mass-disorder scattering is explored using the virtual crystal approximation to screen the entire ternary TixZryHf1−x−yNiSn phase diagram. The lowest lattice thermal conductivity is found for the TixHf1−xNiSn compositions; in particular, there is a shallow minimum centered at Ti0.5Hf0.5NiSn with κℓ taking values between 3.2 and 4.1 W/mK when the Ti content varies between 20% and 80%. Interestingly, the overall behavior of mass-disorder scattering in this system can only be understood from a combination of the nature of the phonon modes and the magnitude of the mass variance. Mass-disorder scattering is not effective at scattering acoustic phonons of low energy. By using a simple model of grain boundary scattering, we find that nanostructuring these compounds can scatter such phonons effectively and thus further reduce the lattice thermal conductivity; for instance, Ti0.5Hf0.5NiSn with a grain size of L=100 nm experiences a 42% reduction of κℓ compared to that of the single crystal.
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Category

Academic article

Client

  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / 228854
  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / nn2615k
  • Sigma2 / NN9180K
  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / NN2615K

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Simen Nut Hansen Eliassen
  • Anikta Katre
  • Georg Madsen
  • Clas Persson
  • Ole Martin Løvvik
  • Kristian Berland

Affiliation

  • University of Oslo
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • France
  • Vienna University of Technology
  • SINTEF Industry / Materials and Nanotechnology

Year

2017

Published in

Physical review B (PRB)

ISSN

2469-9950

Volume

95

Issue

4

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