Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of Concept

Thermal conductivity of bulk Si0.5 Ge0.5 at room temperature has been calculated using density functional perturbation theory and the phonon Boltzmann transport equation. Within the virtual crystal approximation, second- and third-order interatomic force constants have been calculated to obtain anha...

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Main Authors: Konstanze R. Hahn, Claudio Melis, Fabio Bernardini, Luciano Colombo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmech.2021.712989/full
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spelling doaj-4c89fe1876884877b5c0db29d046b4162021-07-28T06:44:31ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering2297-30792021-07-01710.3389/fmech.2021.712989712989Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of ConceptKonstanze R. HahnClaudio MelisFabio BernardiniLuciano ColomboThermal conductivity of bulk Si0.5 Ge0.5 at room temperature has been calculated using density functional perturbation theory and the phonon Boltzmann transport equation. Within the virtual crystal approximation, second- and third-order interatomic force constants have been calculated to obtain anharmonic phonon scattering terms. An additional scattering term is introduced to account for mass disorder in the alloy. In the same way, mass disorder resulting from n- and p-type dopants with different concentrations has been included, considering doping with III-group elements (p-type) such as B, Al, and Ga, and with V-group elements (n-type) such as N, P, and As. Little effect on the thermal conductivity is observed for all dopants with a concentration below 1021 cm−3. At higher concentration, reduction by up to 50% is instead observed with B-doping in agreement with the highest mass variance. Interestingly, the thermal conductivity even increases with respect to the pristine value for dopants Ga and As. This results from a decrease in the mass variance in the doped alloy, which can be considered a ternary system. Results are compared to the analogous effect on the thermal conductivity in doped Si.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmech.2021.712989/fullthermoelectricmass disorderfirst-principles analysisdoped SiGethermal conductivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Konstanze R. Hahn
Claudio Melis
Fabio Bernardini
Luciano Colombo
spellingShingle Konstanze R. Hahn
Claudio Melis
Fabio Bernardini
Luciano Colombo
Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of Concept
Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
thermoelectric
mass disorder
first-principles analysis
doped SiGe
thermal conductivity
author_facet Konstanze R. Hahn
Claudio Melis
Fabio Bernardini
Luciano Colombo
author_sort Konstanze R. Hahn
title Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of Concept
title_short Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of Concept
title_full Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of Concept
title_fullStr Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of Concept
title_full_unstemmed Engineering the Thermal Conductivity of Doped SiGe by Mass Variance: A First-Principles Proof of Concept
title_sort engineering the thermal conductivity of doped sige by mass variance: a first-principles proof of concept
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
issn 2297-3079
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Thermal conductivity of bulk Si0.5 Ge0.5 at room temperature has been calculated using density functional perturbation theory and the phonon Boltzmann transport equation. Within the virtual crystal approximation, second- and third-order interatomic force constants have been calculated to obtain anharmonic phonon scattering terms. An additional scattering term is introduced to account for mass disorder in the alloy. In the same way, mass disorder resulting from n- and p-type dopants with different concentrations has been included, considering doping with III-group elements (p-type) such as B, Al, and Ga, and with V-group elements (n-type) such as N, P, and As. Little effect on the thermal conductivity is observed for all dopants with a concentration below 1021 cm−3. At higher concentration, reduction by up to 50% is instead observed with B-doping in agreement with the highest mass variance. Interestingly, the thermal conductivity even increases with respect to the pristine value for dopants Ga and As. This results from a decrease in the mass variance in the doped alloy, which can be considered a ternary system. Results are compared to the analogous effect on the thermal conductivity in doped Si.
topic thermoelectric
mass disorder
first-principles analysis
doped SiGe
thermal conductivity
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmech.2021.712989/full
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