4.6 Article

Phonon transport properties of two-dimensional group-IV materials from ab initio calculations

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 94, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.94.245420

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11374063, 11404348]
  2. National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2013CBA01505]

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It has been argued that stanene has lowest lattice thermal conductivity among two-dimensional (2D) group-IV materials because of its largest atomic mass, weakest interatomic bonding, and enhanced ZA phonon scattering due to the breaking of an out-of-plane symmetry selection rule. However, we show that, although the lattice thermal conductivity kappa for graphene, silicene, and germanene decreases monotonically with decreasing Debye temperature, unexpected higher kappa is observed in stanene. By enforcing all the invariance conditions in 2D materials and including Ge 3d and Sn 4d electrons as valence electrons for germanene and stanene, respectively, the lattice dynamics in these materials are accurately described. A large acoustic-optical gap and the bunching of the acoustic-phonon branches significantly reduce phonon scattering in stanene, leading to higher thermal conductivity than germanene. The vibrational origin of the acoustic-optical gap can be attributed to the buckled structure. Interestingly, a buckled system has two competing influences on phonon transport: the breaking of the symmetry selection rule leads to reduced thermal conductivity, and the enlarging of the acoustic-optical gap results in enhanced thermal conductivity. The size dependence of thermal conductivity is investigated as well. In nanoribbons, the kappa of silicene, germanene, and stanene is much less sensitive to size effect due to their short intrinsic phonon mean-free paths. This work sheds light on the nature of phonon transport in buckled 2D materials.

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