Amorphous alumina is employed ubiquitously as a high-dielectric-constant material in electronics, and its thermal-transport properties are of key relevance for heat management in electronic chips and devices. Experiments show that the thermal conductivity of alumina depends significantly on the synthesis process, indicating the need for a theoretical study to elucidate the atomistic origin of these variations. Here we employ first-principles simulations to characterize the atomistic structure, vibrational properties, and thermal conductivity of alumina at densities ranging from 2.28 to 3.49 g/cm3. Moreover, using a machine-learned interatomic potential trained on first-principles data, we investigate how system size affects predictions of the thermal conductivity, showing that simulations containing 120 atoms can already reproduce the bulk limit of the conductivity. Finally, relying on the recently developed Wigner formulation of thermal transport, we shed light on the interplay between atomistic topological disorder and anharmonicity in the context of heat conduction, showing that the former dominates over the latter in determining the conductivity of alumina.
CITATION STYLE
Harper, A. F., Iwanowski, K., Witt, W. C., Payne, M. C., & Simoncelli, M. (2024). Vibrational and thermal properties of amorphous alumina from first principles. Physical Review Materials, 8(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.8.043601
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