Adaptation of Wallace's approach to the specific heat of elemental solids with significant intrinsic anharmonicity, particularly the light actinide metals

  • Christopher A. Mizzi
  • , W. Adam Phelan
  • , Matthew S. Cook
  • , Greta L. Chappell
  • , Paul H. Tobash
  • , David C. Arellano
  • , Derek V. Prada
  • , Boris Maiorov
  • , Neil Harrison

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

The quasiharmonic approximation is the most common method for modeling the specific heat of solids; however, it fails to capture the effects of intrinsic anharmonicity. In this study, we introduce the "elastic softening approximation,"an alternative approach to modeling intrinsic anharmonic effects on thermodynamic quantities, which is grounded in Wallace's thermodynamic framework that tracks entropy changes resulting from the continuous change (e.g., softening) of phonons as a function of temperature. A key finding of our study is a correlation between Poisson's ratio and the differential rate of phonon softening at finite frequencies, compared to lower frequencies relevant to elastic moduli measurements. We observe that elemental solids such as α-Be, diamond, Al, Cu, In, W, Au, and Pb, which span a wide range of Poisson's ratios and exhibit varying degrees of intrinsic anharmonicity, consistently follow this trend. When applied to α-U, α-Pu, and δ-Pu, our method reveals unusually large anharmonic phonon contributions at elevated temperatures across all three light actinide metals. These findings are attributed to the unique combination of enhanced covalency and softer elastic moduli inherent in the actinides, potentially influenced by their 5f-electron bonding.

Original languageEnglish
Article number053801
JournalPhysical Review Materials
Volume9
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2025

Funding

Support was provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory LDRD Project No. 20230042DR (code XXN0). A portion of this work was carried out at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, which is funded by NSF Cooperative Agreement 1164477, the State of Florida and the U.S. Department of Energy. DOE BES project “Science of 100 tesla” supported the modeling of electronic contribution.

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