AUTHOR=Ren Weijun , Zhang Zhongwei , Chen Cuncun , Ouyang Yulou , Li Nianbei , Chen Jie TITLE=Phononic Thermal Transport in Yttrium Hydrides Allotropes JOURNAL=Frontiers in Materials VOLUME=7 YEAR=2020 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/materials/articles/10.3389/fmats.2020.569090 DOI=10.3389/fmats.2020.569090 ISSN=2296-8016 ABSTRACT=

Room-temperature superconductivity has been attracting increasing attention in recent years. Recent studies have proved the potential of compressed H-rich materials for achieving room-temperature superconductivity. In this paper, we study the phononic thermal transport in the rare earth yttrium hydrides allotropes under 0, 50, and 300 GPa by using Boltzmann transport equation. We find that the lattice thermal conductivity of yttrium hydrides increases with the pressure among different allotropes, which is attributed to the increase of bond strength and the decrease of phonon-phonon scattering due to structural compression. Yttrium hydrides structure at high pressure of 300 GPa is the superconducting phase, and has high thermal conductivity around 1,360 Wm−1K−1 at room temperature. Comparison of phonon properties with existing high thermal conductivity materials further uncovers the origin for the observed high thermal conductivity. For the zero pressure allotrope, a large number of optical flat bands mix with the low-frequency acoustic phonons, which significantly increases the phonon scattering channel and effectively suppresses the phonon lifetime. As for yttrium hydrides allotropes under 50 and 300 GPa, there are two obvious band gaps in the phonon dispersion relation, and the band gap of the structure at 300 GPa is significantly wider. The occurrence of the band gap effectively inhibits the absorption and emission process of the three-phonon interactions, leading to the decrease of phonon scattering and thus the increase of the phonon lifetime and thermal conductivity at high pressure. Our work reveals the physical mechanism of the thermal transport behaviors in yttrium hydrides structures under different pressures.