Dual-site cationic disorder engineering for ultralow amorphous-like thermal conductivity in thermal barrier coatings
Abstract
Developing thermal barrier coatings (TBCs) with ultralow thermal conductivity and substrate-matched thermal expansion remains a long-standing challenge for enhancing aero-engine efficiency and durability. In this study, we report a single-cation dual-site occupation strategy in a high-entropy pyrochlore (A2B2O7) oxide, formulated as (La1−xYx)2(Zr0.25Sn0.125Ce0.125Nb0.250Y0.250)2O7 (denoted as La1−xYx-HE), in which Y3+ simultaneously occupies both A and B lattice sites. Remarkably, Y3+ serves as the smallest cation suitable for the A site while also being the largest cation suitable for the B site, creating an extreme cation size mismatch-induced lattice disorder. This dual-site disorder effectively enhances phonon scattering, leading to excellent thermal insulation performance, together with a well-matched thermal expansion coefficient. Notably, La0.500Y0.500-HE exhibits an ultralow amorphous-like thermal conductivity of 1.06 W m−1 K−1, approximately half that of conventional/commercial YSZ, while maintaining a compatible thermal expansion coefficient of 10.01 × 10−6 K−1, which aligns well with that of the substrate. Meanwhile, it exhibits excellent mechanical properties, including a Vickers hardness of 9.86 GPa and a Young's modulus of 133.4 GPa. The dual-site disorder strategy provides an effective pathway for designing next-generation TBCs with superior thermal insulation performance.

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