Abstract

Crystalline solids exhibiting glass-like thermal conductivity have attracted substantial attention both for fundamental interest and applications such as thermoelectrics. In most crystals, the competition of phonon scattering by anharmonic interactions and crystalline imperfections leads to a non-monotonic trend of thermal conductivity with temperature. Defect-free crystals that exhibit the glassy trend of low thermal conductivity with a monotonic increase with temperature are desirable because they are intrinsically thermally insulating while retaining useful properties of perfect crystals. However, this behavior is rare, and its microscopic origin remains unclear. Here, we report the observation of ultralow and glass-like thermal conductivity in a hexagonal perovskite chalcogenide single crystal, BaTiS3, despite its highly symmetric and simple primitive cell. Elastic and inelastic scattering measurements reveal the quantum mechanical origin of this unusual trend. A two-level atomic tunneling system exists in a shallow double-well potential of the Ti atom and is of sufficiently high frequency to scatter heat-carrying phonons up to room temperature. While atomic tunneling has been invoked to explain the low-temperature thermal conductivity of solids for decades, our study establishes the presence of sub-THz frequency tunneling systems even in high-quality, electrically insulating single crystals, leading to anomalous transport properties well above cryogenic temperatures.

Highlights

  • 1234567890():,; Crystalline solids exhibiting glass-like thermal conductivity have attracted substantial attention both for fundamental interest and applications such as thermoelectrics

  • We find that the thermal conductivity of this material is among the lowest ever reported for single crystals, and further exhibits a glass-like temperature dependence with ultralow thermal conductivity extending down to cryogenic temperatures

  • Elastic and inelastic scattering measurements reveal the origin of this unusual trend as scattering from an atomic tunneling two-level system formed by the Ti atom residing in a shallow double-well potential

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Summary

Introduction

1234567890():,; Crystalline solids exhibiting glass-like thermal conductivity have attracted substantial attention both for fundamental interest and applications such as thermoelectrics. Direct detection of tunneling of heavy structural atoms is generally not possible with scattering methods as the tunneling splitting energies are expected to be sub GHz34, which is too low to affect thermal conduction except at temperatures less than around 1 K.

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