Abstract

MXenes have many potential applications in electronics, energy storage, sensors, thermal management, and biomedical catalysis. As one of the most widely explored two-dimensional (2D) materials, their transport properties are of broad interest. Due to the difficulty in direct experimental measurements of their thermal conductivity, existing works mainly rely on theoretical approaches. However, only lattice contribution to thermal conductivity in MXenes was studied in previous works, while the role of electrons in thermal transport MXenes has never been elucidated. Herein, we investigate the electron and phonon contribution to the thermal conductivity of three typical metallic 2D MXenes ${[\mathrm{Ti}}_{2}{\mathrm{CF}}_{2}, {\mathrm{Ti}}_{2}{\mathrm{CCl}}_{2}$, and ${\mathrm{Ti}}_{2}\mathrm{C}{(\mathrm{OH})}_{2}]$ with a first-principles approach, in which the mode-level electron-phonon coupling is rigorously considered. The thermal conductivity values are predicted to be 69.1, 104.7, and 54.3 W/mK for ${\mathrm{Ti}}_{2}{\mathrm{CF}}_{2}, {\mathrm{Ti}}_{2}{\mathrm{CCl}}_{2}$, and ${\mathrm{Ti}}_{2}\mathrm{C}{(\mathrm{OH})}_{2}$, respectively. The contribution of electron to total thermal conductivity (37.3--61.3%) is much larger than most existing 2D materials. We find that the relatively large electron density in metallic MXenes leads to the considerable electronic thermal conductivity. Moreover, due to large phonon-electron scattering phase space and matrix element, the phonon thermal conductivity is largely suppressed by the scattering with electrons. Our results clarify the role of electrons in the thermal transport in metallic MXenes and can provide a deeper understanding of the transport mechanism in metallic 2D materials.

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