Kagome modes, a new route to ultralow thermal conductivity?


Abstract in English

From next generation gas turbines to scavenging waste heat from car exhausts, finding new materials with ultra-low thermal conductivity ($kappa$) has the potential to lead to large gains in device efficiency. Crystal structures with inherently low $kappa$ are consequently desirable, but candidate materials are rare and often difficult to make. Using first principles calculations and inelastic neutron scattering we have studied the pyrochlore La$_2$Zr$_2$O$_7$ which has been proposed as a next generation thermal barrier. We find that there is a highly anharmonic, approximately flat, vibrational mode associated with the kagome planes. Our results suggest that this mode is responsible for the low thermal conductivity observed in the pyrochlores and that kagome compounds will be a fruitful place to search for other low $kappa$ materials.

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