Report on 7th US-Japan Joint Seminar on Nanoscale Transport Phenomena – Science and Engineering – December 11-14, 2011, Shima, Japan co-chairs: Shigeo Maruyama, Kazuyoshi Fushinobu, Jennifer Lukes, Li Shi Sponsors: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science National Science Foundation, U.S.A. Office of Naval Research, U.S.A.
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7th US-Japan Joint Seminar on Nanoscale Transport ... 1 Li Shi … · 7th US-Japan Joint Seminar on Nanoscale Transport Phenomena - Science and Engineering – Sponsored by Japan
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Report on 7th US-Japan Joint Seminar on Nanoscale Transport Phenomena
– Science and Engineering –
December 11-14, 2011, Shima, Japan
co-chairs:
Shigeo Maruyama, Kazuyoshi Fushinobu, Jennifer Lukes, Li Shi
Sponsors:
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science National Science Foundation, U.S.A.
Office of Naval Research, U.S.A.
Participants
35 Japanese participants
31 US participants (including 5 assistant professors, 2 post-docs, and 3 grad students)
Technical Sections • Interfacial Thermal Transport
• Thermophysical Measurements of Nanostructures
• Optical Characterization of Transport Processes
• Molecular Dynamics Simulation
• Phonon Transport Modeling
• Energy Conversion and Storage
• Novel Thermoelectric and Thermal Management Materials
• Nanocarbon Materials and Devices
• Nanoscale Fluidic and Phase Change Phenomena
• Transport in Biological and Organic Systems
• Opening Plenary
• Expert Panel
• Posters
• Culture Excursion
• Closing Summary
Focused Topics on Fundamental Phonon Transport
Thermal Transport Across Interfaces
Phonon-Interface Scattering in Nanostructures
Heat Conduction Outside Nanostructures
Coupled Electron and Phonon Transport in Devices
Phonon Recycling
Thermal Transport in Soft Matters
Science Systems
Whatever you do, ask yourself:
How is this going to make a positive impact on the world?
Society
Haber Bosch
Arun Majumdar: Opening Plenary-Global Energy Challenge and Oportunities
Experimental, Computational, and Theoretical Investigation of Thermal Boundary Conductance
Pamela M. Norris U. Va. Nanoscale Energy Transport Lab December 13, 2011
Thermal Transport at Solid-Solid Interfaces
6
• As device features approach the mean-free-path of pertinent energy carriers (~10-100 nm at room temperature), scattering at interfaces is the dominant factor limiting conductance
< 50 nm < 500 μm < 100 mm < 5 cm
G. Chen. Nanoscale Energy Transport and Conversion, Oxford Press, 2005
A typical resistance of 10-9-10-7 m2K/W
is equivalent to ~ 0.15-15 mm Si
•hBD at various interfaces •Highest known conductance is at good metal interfaces (Al/Cu) where electrons dominate transport
•Lowest is between materials with highly mismatched phonon modes and Debye temperatures (such as Bi/H-diamond)
•hBD between ~10-100 MW/m2K at room temperature
Pop, Nano Res, 3, 147-169, 2010 “We now have powerful tools (experiment and computation).”
Progress & Achievement
1.E+07
1.E+08
1.E+09
1.E+10
10 100 1000
New: Anisotropic
DMM
1010
109
108
107
100 1000 10
Temperature, T [K]
Bo
un
dar
y C
on
du
ctan
ce, G
[W
/m2-K
] Effect of Phonon Focusing on Thermal Transport
Traditional: Isotropic DMM
graphite
Al
• Increase vab reduce transport in c.
• Anisotropic DMM agrees much better with experiments. (No free parameters in either model.)
Experiments [Schmidt et al., JAP (2010)]
Iso-DMM
isov
isov
Aniso- DMM
cv
abv
Chris Dames
Experimental, Computational, and Theoretical Investigation of Thermal Boundary Conductance
Pamela M. Norris U. Va. Nanoscale Energy Transport Lab December 13, 2011
Interfacial Thermal Transport
• Inelastic Scattering Processes
• Role of Optical Phonons
• Role of Electrons
• Physical Aspects of the Interface
• Bonding Effects at the Interface
9
Issues:
Experimental, Computational, and Theoretical Investigation of Thermal Boundary Conductance
Pamela M. Norris U. Va. Nanoscale Energy Transport Lab December 13, 2011
Interfacial Thermal Transport
“Nanoscale Thermal Transport” by Cahill, Ford, Goodson, Mahan, Majumdar, Maris, Merlin, and Phillpot, Journal of Applied Physics, 93, 703-818, 2003.
“the interactions of phonons with a single interface still offers significant challenges to both experiments and theory/simulation”
“spectral methods, involving phonons of well-defined frequencies and wave vectors, offer the promise of providing insignts into thermal transport not accessible by more traditional experiments”
“a need for simulations of the interaction of individual phonons with interfaces”
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Future Directions
Interface Scattering of Phonons in Graphene and Nanotubes
• Relevance: nanotubes and graphene are supported on a substrate or embedded in a medium in most foreseeable applications.
• Issues: Roughness scattering or phonon leakage?
• Directions: Engineer interface interaction to enhance thermal transport in nanostructures?