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Abstract This article attempts to summarize our understanding of heat flow in different solid materials and its relationship to atomistic structure of materials. This knowledge can be used to understand and design materials for electricity generation or cooling through the thermoelectric effect. We start with the fundamentals of heat transport in solids: mechanisms of phonon scattering in crystals, the role of interfaces and coherence, and the relationship between chemical bonding and heat transport will be elucidated. Theories used to model thermal conductivity of solids will be exposed next. They include the Green–Kubo formulation, Boltzmann transport equation and its recent quantum extensions, and Allen–Feldman theory of heat diffusion in noncrystalline solids and its recent extensions. In terms of phenomenology, we will distinguish between the kinetic regime based on independent single carriers and the collective or hydrodynamic one which occurs when normal or momentum-conserving processes dominate. Next, we will focus on advanced measurement and characterization techniques, and the knowledge extracted from them. Nanoscale thermal conductivity methods, such as the pump-probe thermoreflectance methods (TDTR/FDTR), have become fairly common allowing researchers to measure thermal conductivity of thin-film thermoelectrics. We will review recent advances of the method: the Gibbs excess approach, which measures thermal resistance across a grain boundary of polycrystals through mapping TDTR/FDTR measurements, and the transient Raman method, where pump-probe Raman spectroscopy realizes in-plane thermal conductivity measurements of two-dimensional materials even on a substrate. We will also review the progress in mode-resolved phonon property measurements, such as inelastic x-ray scattering for thin-film samples, which allows direct observation of the modulation of phonon band and lifetime by nanostructures, and thermal diffuse scattering for quick characterization of phonon dispersion relations. Finally, because the main focus of this issue is thermoelectrics, we will review different classes of materials and strategies to lower their thermal conductivities. Graphical abstractmore » « less
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We introduce a lattice dynamics package which calculates elastic, thermodynamic and thermal transport properties of crystalline materials from data on their force and potential energy as a function of atomic positions. The data can come from density functional theory (DFT) calculations or classical molecular dynamics runs performed in a supercell. First, the model potential parameters, which are anharmonic force constants are extracted from the latter runs. Then, once the anharmonic model is defined, thermal conductivity and equilibrium properties at finite temperatures can be computed using lattice dynamics, Boltzmann transport theories, and a variational principle respectively. In addition, the software calculates the mechanical properties such as elastic tensor, Gruneisen parameters and the thermal expansion coefficient within the quasi-harmonic approximation (QHA). Phonons, elastic constants and thermodynamic properties results applied to the germanium crystal will be illustrated. Using the force constants as a force field, one may also perform molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in order to investigate the combined effects of anharmonicity and defect scattering beyond perturbation theory.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
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