In Hot Pursuit: Tracking Ionic and Phononic Heat Carriers in Li3OCl Across Temperatures
Abstract
Although lithium-rich antiperovskite Li3OCl is a promising candidate for solid-state battery electrolytes, its thermal transport properties—especially at elevated temperatures—remain poorly understood. In this work, we employ Green-Kubo equilibrium molecular dynamics with machine-learned interatomic potentials, and ab initio anharmonic lattice dynamics and a transport framework that captures both particle-like (phononic) and wave-like (diffusive) behaviors. This combined approach enables the prediction of thermal conductivity across a broad temperature range. We disentangle the contributions of lattice vibrations, ionic transport, and their coupling, revealing distinct roles for particle- and wave-like heat carriers' contributions to lattice vibrations. While Li3OCl retains a crystalline structure throughout, thermal transport below ~1100 K is dominated by the particle-like phonon conduction. At higher temperatures, significant Li+ migration emerges in the quasi-liquid state, introducing a particle advection heat transport component. Simultaneously, strong vibrations of the non-migrating lithium atoms promote the wave-like, glassy contribution to vibrational heat conduction. Together, these findings offer a comprehensive understanding of thermal transport in Li3OCl and provide quantitative insights for addressing thermal management in solid-state battery systems.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Journal of Materials Chemistry A HOT Papers