Ultralow thermal conductivity in all-inorganic halide perovskites
Article 2017 en
Authors
WL
Woochul Lee
HL
Huashan Li
AW
Andrew Barnabas Wong
Abstract
1 min read
Significance Discovery of materials with low thermal conductivity in simple, fully dense, and single-crystalline solids has proven extremely challenging. This paper reports the discovery of ultralow thermal conductivity (∼0.4 W⋅m −1 ⋅K −1 ) in single-crystalline, all-inorganic halide perovskite nanowires, which is comparable to their amorphous limit value. We attribute ultralow thermal conductivity to a cluster rattling mechanism, based on strong phonon–phonon scattering via the coexistence of collective motions involving various atom groups. These results call attention to the vital thermal transport processes and thermal management strategies for applications with all-inorganic halide perovskites. Further, CsSnI 3 shows a rare combination of ultralow thermal conductivity and high electrical conductivity, so it can be a promising material for unique applications as an electrically conductive thermal insulator.
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