Intrinsic ultralow lattice thermal conductivity in lead-free halide perovskites Cs3Bi2X9 (X = Br, I)

JJ Ma and JJ Zheng and YX Chen and QY Ren and JF Zhang and BT Wang, PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 26, 21801-21809 (2024).

DOI: 10.1039/d4cp02005g

Lead-free halide perovskites have recently garnered significant attention due to their rich structural diversity and exceptionally ultralow lattice thermal conductivity (kappa(L)). Here, we employ first- principles calculations in conjunction with self-consistent phonon theory and Boltzmann transport equations to investigate the crystal structure, electronic structure, mechanical properties, and kappa(L)s of two typical vacancy-ordered halide perovskites, denoted with the general formula Cs3Bi2X9 (X = Br, I). Ultralow kappa(L)s of 0.401 and 0.262 W mK(-1) at 300 K are predicted for Cs3Bi2Br9 and Cs3Bi2I9, respectively. Our findings reveal that the ultralow kappa(L)s are mainly associated with the Cs rattling-like motion, vibrations of halide polyhedral frameworks, and strong scattering in the acoustic and low-frequency optical phonon branches. The structural analysis indicates that these phonon dynamic properties are closely relevant to the bonding hierarchy. The presence of the extended Bi-X antibonding states at the valence band maximum contributes to the soft elastic lattice and low phonon group velocities. Compared to Cs3Bi2Br9, the face-sharing feature and weaker bond strength in Cs3Bi2I9 lead to a softer elasticity modulus and stronger anharmonicity. Additionally, we demonstrate the presence of wave-like kappa(C) in Cs3Bi2X9 by evaluating the coherent contribution. Our work provides the physical microscopic mechanisms of the wave-like kappa(C) in two typical lead-free halide perovskites, which are beneficial to designing intrinsic materials with the feature of ultralow kappa(L).

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