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Nanoscale thermal transport

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TLDR
A review of the literature on thermal transport in nanoscale devices can be found in this article, where the authors highlight the recent developments in experiment, theory and computation that have occurred in the past ten years and summarizes the present status of the field.
Abstract
Rapid progress in the synthesis and processing of materials with structure on nanometer length scales has created a demand for greater scientific understanding of thermal transport in nanoscale devices, individual nanostructures, and nanostructured materials. This review emphasizes developments in experiment, theory, and computation that have occurred in the past ten years and summarizes the present status of the field. Interfaces between materials become increasingly important on small length scales. The thermal conductance of many solid–solid interfaces have been studied experimentally but the range of observed interface properties is much smaller than predicted by simple theory. Classical molecular dynamics simulations are emerging as a powerful tool for calculations of thermal conductance and phonon scattering, and may provide for a lively interplay of experiment and theory in the near term. Fundamental issues remain concerning the correct definitions of temperature in nonequilibrium nanoscale systems. Modern Si microelectronics are now firmly in the nanoscale regime—experiments have demonstrated that the close proximity of interfaces and the extremely small volume of heat dissipation strongly modifies thermal transport, thereby aggravating problems of thermal management. Microelectronic devices are too large to yield to atomic-level simulation in the foreseeable future and, therefore, calculations of thermal transport must rely on solutions of the Boltzmann transport equation; microscopic phonon scattering rates needed for predictive models are, even for Si, poorly known. Low-dimensional nanostructures, such as carbon nanotubes, are predicted to have novel transport properties; the first quantitative experiments of the thermal conductivity of nanotubes have recently been achieved using microfabricated measurement systems. Nanoscale porosity decreases the permittivity of amorphous dielectrics but porosity also strongly decreases the thermal conductivity. The promise of improved thermoelectric materials and problems of thermal management of optoelectronic devices have stimulated extensive studies of semiconductor superlattices; agreement between experiment and theory is generally poor. Advances in measurement methods, e.g., the 3ω method, time-domain thermoreflectance, sources of coherent phonons, microfabricated test structures, and the scanning thermal microscope, are enabling new capabilities for nanoscale thermal metrology.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Heat transfer in soft nanoscale interfaces: the influence of interface curvature

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the thermal conductivity and interfacial conductance of n-decane (2-12 nm diameter) droplets in water using transient non-equilibrium molecular-dynamics simulations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermal Transport at the Nanoscale - A Fourier's Law vs. Phonon Boltzmann Equation Study

TL;DR: In this article, the Fourier's Law results were compared to finite volume method solutions of the phonon Boltzmann equation in the gray approximation for steady state thermal transport in nanostructures with dimensions comparable to phonon mean free-path.
Journal ArticleDOI

Profiling nanowire thermal resistance with a spatial resolution of nanometers.

TL;DR: A new technique is reported to profile the thermal resistance along a nanowire with a spatial resolution of better than 20 nm and the interfacial thermal resistance (ITR) across the Si/NiSi2 interface embedded in Si/ NiSi2 heterostructured nanowires does not change even for adjacent interfaces as close as ∼ 50 atomic layers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exact matrix product solutions in the Heisenberg picture of an open quantum spin chain

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the time-evolution of an open quadratic fermi chain subjected to master equation evolution with Lindblad operators that are linear in the fermionic operators can be described by matrix product operators with the same fixed dimension as that required by the solution of a coherent fermic chain for all times.
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Ultralow Thermal Conductivity of Two-Dimensional Metal Halide Perovskites.

TL;DR: By systematically studying eight different two-dimensional hybrid perovskites, it is shown that the thermal conductivities of the authors' hybrid films do not depend on the thicknesses of the organic layers and instead are highly dependent on the relative orientation of theorganic chains sandwiched between the inorganic constituents.
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Masao Doi, +1 more
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