When all details matter — Heat transport in energy materials

The NOMAD Laboratory researchers have recently elucidated on fundamental microscopic mechanisms that offer to tailor materials for heat insulation. This development advances the ongoing efforts to enhance energy efficiency and sustainability.

The NOMAD Laboratory researchers have recently elucidated on fundamental microscopic mechanisms that offer to tailor materials for heat insulation. This development advances the ongoing efforts to enhance energy efficiency and sustainability.

The role of heat transport is crucial in various scientific and industrial applications, such as catalysis, turbine technologies, and thermoelectric heat converters that convert waste heat into electricity. Particularly in the context of energy conservation and the development of sustainable technologies, materials with high thermal insulation capabilities are of utmost importance. These materials allow to retain and utilize heat that would otherwise go to waste. Therefore, improving the design of highly insulating materials is a key research objective in enabling more energy-efficient applications.

However, designing strongly heat insulators is far from trivial, despite the fact that the underlying fundamental physical laws are known for nearly a century. At a microscopic level, heat transport in semiconductors and insulators was understood in terms of the collective oscillation of the atoms around their equilibrium positions in the crystal lattice. These oscillations, called “phonons” in the field, involve zillions of atoms in solid materials and hence cover large, almost macroscopic length- and time-scales.

In a recent joined publication in Physical Review B (Editors Suggestions) and Physical Review Letters, researchers from the NOMAD Laboratory at the Fritz Haber Institute have advanced the computational possibilities to compute thermal conductivities without experimental input at unprecedented accuracy. They demonstrated that for strong heat insulators the above-mentioned phonon picture is not appropriate. Using large-scale calculations on supercomputers at of the Max Planck Society, the North-German Supercomputing Alliance, and the Jülich Supercomputing Centre, they scanned over 465 crystalline materials, for which the thermal conductivity had not been measured yet. Besides finding 28 strong thermal insulators, six of which featuring an ultra-low thermal conductivity comparable to wood, this study shed light on a hitherto typically overseen mechanisms that allows to systematically lower the thermal conductivity. We observed the temporary formation of defect structures that massively influences the atomic motion for an extremely short period of time, says Dr. Florian Knoop (now Linköping University), first author of both publications. “Such effects are typically neglected in thermal-conductivity simulations, since these defects are so short-lived and so microscopically localised compared to typical heat-transport scales, that they are assumed to be irrelevant. However, the performed calculations showed that they trigger lower thermal conductivities”, adds Dr. Christian Carbogno, a senior author of the studies.

These insights may offer new opportunities to fine-tune and design thermal insulators on a nanoscale level through defect engineering, potentially contributing to advances in energy-efficient technology.

Bacteria loop-the-loop

Research team with participation from the University of Göttingen analyses flagellar locomotionThe magnetotactic bacterium Magnetococcus marinus swims with the help of two bundles of...

Listeria surveillance: New EU-wide study reveals that most outbreaks remain undetected

Credit: Eurosurveillance More than half of the severe listeriosis cases in the European Union belong to clusters, many of which are not being picked...

Pitt engineer Mostafa Bedewy selected for the Frontiers of Materials award by Minerals, Metals and Materials Society

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS) has selected Mostafa Bedewy, assistant professor of industrial engineering at the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of...

Scientists report on latest deepwater horizon oil spill impacts

LSU scientists will present new research at the 2017 Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference in New Orleans next week. These...

CNIO researcher funded by Melanoma Research Alliance to study brain metastasis in melanoma

Manuel Valiente, head of the Brain Metastasis Group at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), has been funded in the 2017 grant cycle...

Study identifies hundreds of genes that influence timing of puberty

The largest genomic analysis of puberty timing in men and women conducted to date has identified 389 genetic signals associated with puberty timing, four...

In the gut, nervous cells are the ‘eyes and ears’ of the immune system

A team of scientists in Portugal has discovered, in the mouse gut, a novel process that protects the bowel's lining against inflammation and microbial...

Differences in end-of-life interventions between men, women with advanced dementia

What The Study Did: In a study of 27,000 nursing home residents in Canada with advanced dementia who died, researchers describe differences between men...

Cutting-edge discovery points to potential treatment for NEC in preemies

Scientists discover how to prevent disease in an animal model, offer a new direction toward treatment strategyCutting-edge discovery in the lab of Catherine Hunter,...