Fig. 4. Simulated thermal distributions of (a) the designed thermal expander, (b) the referenced Material I (Copper) sample, and (c) the referenced Material.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mechanisms of Terahertz Radiation Generation in Graphene Structures Institute for Nuclear Problems, Belarus State University, Belarus The XII-th International.
Advertisements

IMS, 26 Nov Models for Thermal & Thermal : Pave the way for heat control Baowen Li ( 李保文 ) Nonlinear and Complex Systems Lab Department of Physics.
USING LIGHT EMITTING DIODES FOR LIGHTING BY: GRANT GORMAN AND ALEC PAHL 5/6/2013 ABSTRACT: LIGHT EMITTING DIODES ARE SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES THAT EMIT LIGHT.
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect CIRP Annals - Manufacturing Technology journal homepage: High aspect.
FARADAY ROTATION Gennady Voronov In this experiments we experimentally determine the Verdet constant of a glass rod with specification SF-59 to be rad/mT*cm.
Exact solution of a Levy walk model for anomalous heat transport
Scattering property of rough surface of silicon solar cells Bai Lu a, b, *,Wu Zhensen a, Tang Shuangqing a and Pan Yongqiang b a School of Science, Xidian.
III. Results and Discussion In scanning laser microscopy, the detected voltage signal  V(x,y) is given by where j b (x,y) is the local current density,
Numerical Simulation of Atmospheric Pressure Discharges Controlled By Dielectric Barrier Wang Dezhen, Wang Yanhui, Zhang Yuantao State Key Laboratory.
Introductio n The guiding of relativistic laser pulse in performed hollow plasma channels Xin Wang and Wei Yu Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics,
Metamaterial Emergence of novel material properties Ashida Lab Masahiro Yoshii PRL 103, (2009)
Heat conduction induced by non-Gaussian athermal fluctuations Kiyoshi Kanazawa (YITP) Takahiro Sagawa (Tokyo Univ.) Hisao Hayakawa (YITP) 2013/07/03 Physics.
ELECTRICAL PROPERTIES
Photo-induced Multi-Mode Coherent Acoustic Phonons in the Metallic Nanoprisms Po-Tse Tai 1, Pyng Yu 2, Yong-Gang Wang 2 and Jau Tang* 2, 3 1 Chung-Shan.
Numerical Simulation on Flow Generated Resistive Wall Mode Shaoyan Cui (1,2), Xiaogang Wang (1), Yue Liu (1), Bo Yu (2) 1.State Key Laboratory of Materials.
Application of the Electrothermal Average Inductor Model for Analyses of Boost Converters Krzysztof Górecki, Janusz Zarębski, Kalina Detka Gdynia Maritime.
Influence of Point Defects on the Properties of Highly Mismatched Alloys Rachel Goldman, University of Michigan Ann Arbor, DMR It has been suggested.
Tao Yuan, Jingzhou Xu, and Xicheng Zhang Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York Scanning THz Emission Microscope Abstract A THz image system.
Xiaozhong Zhang, Xinyu Tan, Lihua Wu, Xin Zhang, Xili Gao, Caihua Wan National Center for Electron Microscopy (Beijing) Laboratory of Advanced Materials.
Meta-stable Sites in Amorphous Carbon Generated by Rapid Quenching of Liquid Diamond Seung-Hyeob Lee, Seung-Cheol Lee, Kwang-Ryeol Lee, Kyu-Hwan Lee, and.
Enhanced heat transfer in confined pool boiling
Current spreading and thermal effects in blue LED dice Jen Kai Lee.
Relationship between thermal and luminance distributions in high-power lateral GaN/InGaN light-emitting diodes D.P. Han, J.I. Shim and D.S. Shin ELECTRONICS.
SSL Lab. SSL Lab. Solid State Lighting Lab. Southern Taiwan University 1 Adviser : Hon Kuan Reporter: Wei-Shun Huang Southern Taiwan University Efficient.
Controlled fabrication and optical properties of one-dimensional SiGe nanostructures Zilong Wu, Hui Lei, Zhenyang Zhong Introduction Controlled Si and.
High performance optical absorber based on a plasmonic metamaterial 岑剡.
Name: Chen Xuesheng Supervisor: Dr. Raj Balendra Project: Precision Cold Forging Status: The Second Year of Ph.D Research Title of presentation:
Conclusion QDs embedded in micropillars are fabricated by MOCVD and FIB post milling processes with the final quality factor about Coupling of single.
Conclusion Room- temperature ferrimagnet with large magnetism P. S. Wang, H. J. Xiang* Key Laboratory of Computational Physical Sciences (Ministry of Education),
Address: 2401 East building Guanghua tower Phone: Magnetic and spin polarized transport properties.
Direct Observation of Polariton Waveguide in ZnO nanowire at Room Temperature motivation abstract We report the direct experimental evidence of polariton.
Date of download: 7/5/2016 Copyright © 2016 SPIE. All rights reserved. A graph of the structure factor at volume fractions fv=0.001, 0.2, and 0.5 as a.
Date of download: 7/9/2016 Copyright © ASME. All rights reserved. From: Obtaining Time-Varying Pulsatile Gas Flow Rates With the Help of Dynamic Pressure.
Date of download: 7/11/2016 Copyright © 2016 SPIE. All rights reserved. Scheme of the simulation arrangement. The red hour glass shape denotes the illumination.
Modelling LED Lamps with Thermal Phenomena Taken into Account Krzysztof Górecki and Przemysław Ptak Gdynia Maritime University Department of Marine Electronics.
Beijing Institute of Technology
Date of download: 10/9/2017 Copyright © ASME. All rights reserved.
Date of download: 10/14/2017 Copyright © ASME. All rights reserved.
超臨界CO2在增強型地熱系統儲集層中取熱之研究-子計畫三 CO2在增強型地熱系統取熱模型之建構及效能分析
Excitation based cone-beam X-ray luminescence tomography of nanophosphors with different concentrations Peng Gao*, Huangsheng Pu*, Junyan Rong, Wenli Zhang,
From: Additive Manufacturing of Glass
Strong infrared electroluminescence from black silicon
Magneto-Photoluminescence of Carbon Nanotubes at Ultralow Temperatures
Krzysztof Górecki and Kalina Detka
Measured optical reflectance spectra of the composite sample
Carbon Nanotube Diode Design
Inroduction Results Conclusion
Hydration Force in the Atomic Force Microscope: A Computational Study
Introduction Results Methods Conclusions
8-3 RRAM Based Convolutional Neural Networks for High Accuracy Pattern Recognition and Online Learning Tasks Z. Dong, Z. Zhou, Z.F. Li, C. Liu, Y.N. Jiang,
Bi-functional cloak by using transformation media
Department of Physics, Fudan University, Shanghai, China
Ising game: Equivalence between Exogenous and Endogenous Factors
Optical-Null Transformation Medias: Realizations and Applications
Specific heat of iron-based high-Tc superconductors
*Corresponding author, TEL :
Rotational and vibrational energy distributions of surface scattered molecules. Rotational and vibrational energy distributions of surface scattered molecules.
Evidence for a fractional fractal quantum Hall effect in graphene superlattices by Lei Wang, Yuanda Gao, Bo Wen, Zheng Han, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe,
Isocost Lines Describe the Cellular Economy of Genetic Circuits
Ballistic miniband conduction in a graphene superlattice
Fig. 4 Pupil shape and image quality in the model sheep eye.
Thermal illusions with coordinate transformation
Department of Physics, Fudan University, Shanghai , China
Two Dimensional Phosphorus Oxides as Energy and Information Materials
Annual Academic Conference of Dept. Physics, Fudan University (2016)
Fig. 3 Thermal management strategies in STD systems.
Huisheng Zhang, Zhongqin Yang*
Planar gradient meta-surface to focus EM waves in reflection geometry
Fig. 2 Observation of type II Weyl nodes in LaAlGe.
Fig. 5 Modeling of the ASE threshold using the kinetic equations and experimental parameter inputs. Modeling of the ASE threshold using the kinetic equations.
Presentation transcript:

Fig. 4. Simulated thermal distributions of (a) the designed thermal expander, (b) the referenced Material I (Copper) sample, and (c) the referenced Material II (Copper with holes) sample in a point-line heat field. The corresponding results of experimental observations are shown in (d), (e) and (f), respectively. The black curves depict the structure and location of the thermal expander for reference. The white curves in (a), (b) and (c) are isothermal lines (with steps of C) corresponding to the color legend. Point-line conversion Uniformly expanding effect Fig. 3. Simulated expanding effects of (a) the designed thermal expander, (b) the referenced Material I (Copper) sample, and (c) the referenced Material II (Copper with holes) sample. The corresponding results of experimental observations are shown in (d), (e) and (f), respectively. The black curves depict the structure and location of the thermal expander for reference. The white curves in (a), (b) and (c) are isothermal lines (with step of 6 0 C) corresponding to the color legends. Thermal Expander Junying Huang and Jiping Huang Department of Physics and State Key Laboratory of Surface Physics, Fudan University, Shanghai , China Introduction As one of the fundamental energy transport phenomena in nature, heat flow automatically balances the thermal distribution around us. Unfortunately, although people have realized that the ability to precisely control heat conduction will lead to an abundant wealth of applications (e. g. thermal computation and thermal memory), heat flow management is still in its infancy. To date, many interesting thermal devices (such as thermal rectifiers, thermal diodes, thermal cloaks, and et al.) have been proposed for the purpose of taming heat flow. However, one kind of thermal device, which could uniformly expand the heat flow without distorting the flow front (described by the shape of isothermal line) as the optical beam expander does for a laser beam, has not been proposed and verified yet. It is apparent that such a kind of thermal device, named as thermal expander, would have deep implication in thermal circuit and thermal management. Here, we report the study on a two-component thermal expander. The realization of the thermal expander is achieved by matching the thermal conductivities and geometries of two materials with a simple condition. The uniformly expanding effect of the thermal expander is demonstrated through both numerical simulation and experimental observation. Furthermore, the thermal expander also shows an advantage in efficiently rectifying a heat flow from crooked flow front to linear flow front, which is also verified by simulation and experiment. Summary In conclusion, a new type of thermal device, named as thermal expander, is proposed and demonstrated through both numerical simulation and experimental observation. The thermal expander performs a uniformly expanding effect on the heat flow. Furthermore, the thermal expander could also efficiently rectify the heat flow from crooked front shape to linear front shape. With these properties, the thermal expander would have deep implications for thermal circuits and thermal management. The realization of a thermal expander only needs that the thermal conductivities and geometries of two materials match a simple condition (Eq. 1). The method is so simple that the thermal expander could show its influence on thermal industry right away. Furthermore, although the thermal expander proposed and demonstrated in our study is in macro-scale, obviously, the method to fabricate a thermal expander can be easily extended to micro-scale and nano-scale regimes where the Eq. 1 is still valid. References [1] Li, N., Ren, J., Wang, L., Zhang, G., Hanggi, P. & Li, B. Rev. Mod. Phys. 84, (2012). [2] Maldovan, M. Nature (London) 503, (2013). [3] Chang, C. W., Okawa, D., Majumdar, A. & Zettl, A. Science 314, (2006). [4] Schittny, R., Kadic, M., Guenneau, S. & Wegener, M. Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, (2013). [5] Han, T., Bai, X., Gao, D., Thong, J. T. L., Li, B. & Qiu, C.-W. Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, (2014). [6] Huang, J. P. & Yu, K. W. Phys. Rep. 431, (2006). [7] Franssila, S. Introduction to microfabrication (John Wiley & Sons, New York, 2010), 2nd ed. [8] D. A. G. Bruggeman, Ann. Phys. (Leipzig) 24, 636 (1935). Illustration Fig. 1. (a) Schematic diagram of a thermal expander (area depicted by red dashed curves). Blue curves denote the boundaries between regions with thermal conductivities κ 1 and κ 2 (respectively). (b) Simulated expanding effect of thermal expander on heat flow. (c) Simulated result of a heat flow rectified from crooked flow front to linear flow front by thermal expander. The black curves in (b) and (c) depict the structure and location of thermal expander. The white curves are isothermal lines (with steps of 6 0 C for (b) and C for (c)) corresponding to the color legend. Each isothermal line arrowed describes the shape of flow front on the end-position of thermal expander. Condition Sample for experiment Fig. 2. Blueprint of the designed thermal expander for experiments. The black regions are copper and the white regions are PDMS with thermal conductivities of 400 and 0.15 W (m·K) -1, respectively. The white holes are of diameter 2.2 mm and hexagonally placed with a lattice constant 4 mm.