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Thermal Properties of Materials Li Shi Department of Mechanical Engineering & Center for Nano and Molecular Science and Technology, Texas Materials Institute The University of Texas at Austin Austin, TX 78712 www.me.utexas.edu/~lishi lishi@mail.utexas.edu
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2 Outline Macroscopic Thermal Transport Theory– Diffusion -- Fourier’s Law -- Diffusion Equation Microscale Thermal Transport Theory – Particle Transport -- Kinetic Theory of Gases -- Electrons in Metals -- Phonons in Insulators -- Boltzmann Transport Theory Thermal Properties of Nanostructures -- Thin Films and Superlattices -- Nanowires and Nanotubes -- Nano Electromechanical System (NEMS)
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3 Thermal conductivity Hot T h Cold T c L Q (heat flow) Fourier’s Law for Heat Conduction
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4 Heat Diffusion Equation Specific heat Heat conduction = Rate of change of energy storage 1 st law (energy conservation) Conditions: t >> scattering mean free time of energy carriers L >> l scattering mean free path of energy carriers Breaks down for applications involving thermal transport in small length/ time scales, e.g. nanoelectronics, nanostructures, NEMS, ultrafast laser materials processing…
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5 Length Scale 1 m 1 mm 1 m 1 nm Human Automobile Butterfly 1 km Aircraft Computer Wavelength of Visible Light MEMS Width of DNA MOSFET, NEMS Blood Cells Microprocessor Module Nanotubes, Nanowires Particle transport 100 nm Fourier’s law l
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6 Outline Macroscopic Thermal Transport Theory– Diffusion -- Fourier’s Law -- Diffusion Equation Microscale Thermal Transport Theory– Particle Transport -- Kinetic Theory of Gases -- Electrons in Metals -- Phonons in Insulators -- Boltzmann Transport Theory Thermal Properties of Nanostructures -- Thin Films and Superlattices -- Nanowires and Nanotubes -- Nano Electromechanical System (NEMS)
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7 D D Mean Free Path for Intermolecular Collision for Gases Total Length Traveled = L Total Collision Volume Swept = D 2 L Number Density of Molecules = n Total number of molecules encountered in swept collision volume = n D 2 L Average Distance between Collisions, mc = L/(#of collisions) Mean Free Path : collision cross-sectional area
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8 Mean Free Path for Gas Molecules Number Density of Molecules from Ideal Gas Law: n = P/k B T k B : Boltzmann constant 1.38 x 10 -23 J/K Mean Free Path: Typical Numbers: Diameter of Molecules, D 2 Å = 2 x10 -10 m Collision Cross-section: 1.3 x 10 -19 m Mean Free Path at Atmospheric Pressure: At 1 Torr pressure, mc 200 m; at 1 mTorr, mc 20 cm
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9 Wall b : boundary separation Effective Mean Free Path: Effective Mean Free Path
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10 Kinetic Theory of Energy Transport z z - z z + z u(z- z ) u(z+ z ) qzqz Net Energy Flux / # of Molecules through Taylor expansion of u u: energy Integration over all the solid angles total energy flux Thermal conductivity: Specific heat Velocity Mean free path
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11 If so, what are C, v, for electrons and crystal vibrations? Kinetic theory is valid for particles: can electrons and crystal vibrations be considered particles? Questions
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Free Electrons in Metals at 0 K EF EF Work Function Energy Fermi Energy – highest occupied energy state: Fermi Velocity: Vacuum Level Band Edge Fermi Temp: Metal
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Effect of Temperature Fermi-Dirac equilibrium distribution for the probability of electron occupation of energy level E at temperature T 0 1 E F Electron Energy,E Occupation Probability, f Work Function, IncreasingT T = 0 K k T B Vacuum Level
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14 Number and Energy Densities Density of States -- Number of electron states available between energy E and E+dE Number density: Energy density: in 3D
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15 Electronic Specific Heat and Thermal Conductivity Specific Heat Thermal Conductivity Electron Scattering Mechanisms Defect Scattering Phonon Scattering Boundary Scattering (Film Thickness, Grain Boundary) e Temperature, T Defect Scattering Phonon Scattering Increasing Defect Concentration Bulk Solids Mean free time: e = l e / v F in 3D
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16 Matthiessen Rule: Thermal Conductivity of Cu and Al Electrons dominate k in metals
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17 Since electrons are traveling waves, can we apply kinetic theory of particle transport? Two conditions need to be satisfied: Length scale is much larger than electron wavelength or electron coherence length Electron scattering randomizes the phase of wave function such that it is a traveling packet of charge and energy Afterthought
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18 Crystal Vibration Interatomic Bonding 1-D Array of Spring Mass System Equation of motion with nearest neighbor interaction Solution
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19 Dispersion Relation Frequency, Wave vector, K 0 /a Longitudinal Acoustic (LA) Mode Transverse Acoustic (TA) Mode Group Velocity: Speed of Sound:
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20 Lattice Constant, a xnxn ynyn y n-1 x n+1 Two Atoms Per Unit Cell Frequency, Wave vector, K 0 /a LA TA LO TO Optical Vibrational Modes
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21 Phonon Dispersion in GaAs
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22 Energy Quantization and Phonons Total Energy of a Quantum Oscillator in a Parabolic Potential n = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4…; /2: zero point energy Phonon: A quantum of vibrational energy, , which travels through the lattice Phonons follow Bose-Einstein statistics. Equilibrium distribution: In 3D, allowable wave vector K:
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23 Lattice Energy p: polarization(LA,TA, LO, TO) K: wave vector Dispersion Relation: Energy Density: Density of States: Number of vibrational states between and +d Lattice Specific Heat: in 3D
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Debye Model Frequency, Wave vector, K 0 /a Debye Approximation: Debye Density of States: Debye Temperature [K] Specific Heat in 3D: In 3D, when T << D,
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Phonon Specific Heat Classical Regime In general, when T << D, d =1, 2, 3: dimension of the sample Each atom has a thermal energy of 3K B T Specific Heat (J/m 3 -K) Temperature (K) C T 3 3kBT3kBT Diamond
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Phonon Thermal Conductivity Kinetic Theory l Temperature, T/ D Boundary Phonon Scattering Defect Decreasing Boundary Separation Increasing Defect Concentration Phonon Scattering Mechanisms Boundary Scattering Defect & Dislocation Scattering Phonon-Phonon Scattering 0.01 0.1 1.0
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Phonons dominate k in insulators Thermal Conductivity of Insulators
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28 Drawbacks of Kinetic Theory Assumes local thermodynamics equilibrium: u=u(T) Breaks down when L ; t Assumes single particle velocity and single mean free path or mean free time. Breaks down when, v g ( ) or Cannot handle non-equilibrium problems Short pulse laser interactions High electric field transport in devices Cannot handle wave effects Interference, diffraction, tunneling
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Boltzmann Transport Equation for Particle Transport Distribution Function of Particles: f = f (r,p,t) --probability of particle occupation of momentum p at location r and time t Relaxation Time Approximation t Equilibrium Distribution: f 0, i.e. Fermi-Dirac for electrons, Bose-Einstein for phonons Relaxation time Non-equilibrium, e.g. in a high electric field or temperature gradient:
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Energy flux in terms of particle flux carrying energy: k dk q v Energy Flux Integrate over all the solid angle: Integrate over energy instead of momentum: Density of States: # of phonon modes per frequency range Vector Scalar
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Continuum Case BTE Solution: Direction x is chosen to in the direction of q Energy Flux: Fourier Law of Heat Conduction: If v and are independent of particle energy, , then Quasi-equilibrium Kinetic theory: ( ) can be treated using Callaway method (Phys. Rev. 113, 1046)
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At Small Length/Time Scale (L~ l or t~ ) Define phonon intensity: 0 Equation of Phonon Radiative Transfer (EPRT) (Majumdar, JHT 115, 7): From BTE: Acoustically Thin Limit (L<< l ) and for T << D Acoustically Thick Limit (L>> l ) Heat flux:
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33 Outline Macroscopic Thermal Transport Theory – Diffusion -- Fourier’s Law -- Diffusion Equation Microscale Thermal Transport Theory – Particle Transport -- Kinetic Theory of Gases -- Electrons in Metals -- Phonons in Insulators -- Boltzmann Transport Theory Thermal Properties of Nanostructures -- Thin Films and Superlattices -- Nanowires and Nanotubes -- Nano Electromechanical System
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34 Thin Film Thermal Conductivity Measurement I 0 sin( t) L2b Thin Film Substrate Metal line 3 method (Cahill, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 61, 802) I ~ 1 T ~ I 2 ~ 2 R ~ T ~ 2 V~ IR ~3 V
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35 Silicon on Insulator (SOI) IBM SOI Chip Ju and Goodson, APL 74, 3005 Lines: BTE results Hot spots!
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36 Thermoelectric Cooling No moving parts: quiet and reliable No Freon: clean
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37 Coefficient of Performance where Thermoelectric Figure of Merit (ZT) Seebeck coefficient Electrical conductivity Thermal conductivity Temperature Bi 2 Te 3 Freon T H = 300 K T C = 250 K
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38 ZT Enhancement in Thin Film Superlattices EcEc EvEv x E Ge Quantum well (QW) Si Barrier Increased phonon-boundary scattering decreased k + other size effects High ZT = S 2 T/ k SiGe superlattice (Shakouri, UCSC)
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39 Thermal Conductivity of Si/Ge Superlattices Period Thickness (Å) k (W/m-K) Bulk Si 0.5 Ge 0.5 Alloy Circles: Measurement by D. Cahill’s group Lines: BTE / EPRT results by G. Chen
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40 Superlattice Micro-coolers Ref: Venkatasubramanian et al, Nature 413, P. 597 (2001)
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41 Nanowires Increased phonon-boundary scattering Modified phonon dispersion Suppressed thermal conductivity Ref: Chen and Shakouri, J. Heat Transfer 124, 242 Hot Cold p 22 nm diameter Si nanowire, P. Yang, Berkeley
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42 Pt resistance thermometer Suspended SiN x membrane Long SiN x beams Q I Thermal Measurements of Nanotubes and Nanowires Kim et al, PRL 87, 215502 Shi et al, JHT, in press Themal conductance: G = Q / (T h -T s )
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43 Si Nanowires Source Drain Gate Nanowire Channel Si Nanotransistor (Berkeley Device group) D. Li et al., Berkeley Symbols: Measurements Lines: Modified Callaway Method Hot Spots in Si nanotransistors!
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44 ZT Enhancement in Nanowires Ref: Phys. Rev. B. 62, 4610 by Dresselhaus’s group Top View Nanowire Al 2 O 3 template Nanowires based on Bi, BiSb,Bi 2 Te 3,SiGe Bi Nanowires k reduction and other size effects High ZT = S 2 T/ k
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45 Nanotube Nanoelectronics TubeFET (McEuen et al., Berkeley) Nanotube Logic (Avouris et al., IBM)
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46 Thermal Transport in Carbon Nanotubes Few scattering: long mean free path l Strong SP 2 bonding: high sound velocity v high thermal conductivity: k = Cvl/3 ~ 6000 W/m-K Below 30 K, thermal conductance 4G 0 = ( 4 x 10 -12 T) W/m-K, linear T dependence (G 0 :Quantum of thermal conductance) Hot Cold p Heat capacity
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47 Thermal Conductance of a Nanotube Mat Estimated thermal conductivity at 300K: ~ 250 << 6000 W/m-K Junction resistance is dominant Ref: Hone et al. APL 77, 666 Linear behavior 25 K Intrinsic property remains unknown
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Thermal Conductivity of Carbon Nanotubes CVD SWCN An individual nanotube has a high k ~ 2000-11000 W/m-K at 300 K k of a CN bundle is reduced by thermal resistance at tube-tube junctions The diameter and chirality of a CN may be probed using Raman spectroscopy CNT
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49 Nano Electromechanical System (NEMS) Thermal conductance quantization in nanoscale SiN x beams (Schwab et al., Nature 404, 974 ) Quantum of Thermal Conductance Phonon Counters?
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50 Summary Macroscopic Thermal Transport Theory – Diffusion -- Fourier’s Law -- Diffusion Equation Microscale Thermal Transport Theory – Particle Transport -- Kinetic Theory of Gases -- Electrons in Metals -- Phonons in Insulators -- Boltzmann Transport Theory Thermal Properties of Nanostructures -- Thin Films and Superlattices -- Nanowires and Nanotubes -- Nano Electromechanical System (NEMS)
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