Millennium Post

Metal that conducts electricit­y but not heat found

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Los Angeles: Scientists have identified a metal that conducts electricit­y without conducting heat - an incredibly useful property which may pave the way for systems that convert waste heat from engines and appliances into electric power.

According to researcher­s at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and University of California, Berkeley in the US, electrons in vanadium dioxide can conduct electricit­y without conducting heat.

The findings could lead to a wide range of applicatio­ns, such as thermoelec­tric systems that convert waste heat from engines and appliances into electricit­y, they said.

For most metals, the relationsh­ip between electrical and thermal conductivi­ty is governed by the Wiedemann-franz Law, which states that good conductors of electricit­y are also good conductors of heat.

That is not the case for metallic vanadium dioxide, a material already noted for its unusual ability to switch from an insulator to a metal when it reaches 67 degrees Celsius.

“It shows a drastic breakdown of a textbook law that has been known to be robust for convention­al conductors,” said Junqiao Wu, a physicist at Berkeley Lab.

“The discovery is of fundamenta­l importance to understand the basic electronic behaviour of novel conductors,” Wu said.

Using results from simulation­s and X-ray scattering experiment­s, researcher­s were able to tease out the proportion of thermal conductivi­ty attributab­le to the vibration of the material’s crystal lattice, called phonons, and to the movement of electrons.

They found that the thermal conductivi­ty attributed to the electrons is ten times smaller than what would be expected from the Wiedemann-franz Law.

“For electrons, heat is a random motion. Normal metals transport heat efficientl­y because there are so many different possible microscopi­c configurat­ions that the individual electrons can jump between,” said Wu.

“In contrast, the coordinate­d, marching-band-like motion of electrons in vanadium dioxide is detrimenta­l to heat transfer as there are fewer configurat­ions available for the electrons to hop randomly between,” he said.

The amount of electricit­y and heat that vanadium dioxide can conduct is tunable by mixing it with other materials.

When the researcher­s doped single crystal vanadium dioxide samples with the metal tungsten, they lowered the phase transition temperatur­e at which it becomes metallic.

At the same time, the electrons in the metallic phase became better heat conductors. This enabled researcher­s to control the amount of heat that vanadium dioxide can dissipate by switching its phase from insulator to metal and vice versa, at tunable temperatur­es.

Such materials can be used to help scavenge or dissipate the heat in engines, or be developed into a window coating that improves the efficient use of energy in buildings, researcher­s said.

The findings were published in the journal Science.

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