Point defects in solids such as vacancy and dopants often cause large thermal resistance. Because the lattice site occupied by a point defect has a much smaller size than phonon… Click to show full abstract
Point defects in solids such as vacancy and dopants often cause large thermal resistance. Because the lattice site occupied by a point defect has a much smaller size than phonon wavelengths, the scattering of thermal acoustic phonons by point defects in solids has been widely assumed to be the Rayleigh scattering type. In contrast to this conventional perception, using an ab initio Green's function approach, we show that the scattering by point defects in PbTe and GeTe exhibits Mie scattering characterized by a weaker frequency dependence of the scattering rates and highly asymmetric scattering phase functions. These unusual behaviors occur because the strain field induced by a point defect can extend for a long distance much larger than the lattice spacing. Because of the asymmetric scattering phase functions, the widely used relaxation time approximation fails with an error of ~20% at 300K in predicting lattice thermal conductivity when the vacancy fraction is 1%. Our results show that the phonon scattering by point defects in IV-VI semiconductors cannot be described by the simple kinetic theory combined with Rayleigh scattering.
               
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