Enhancing interfacial thermal transport by nanostructures: Monte Carlo simulations with ab initio phonon properties
Recent experiments have indicated that employing nanostructures can enhance interfacial heat transport, but the mechanism by which different structural morphologies and dimensions contribute to the full-spectrum phonon interfacial transport remains unclear. In this paper, a multiscale method to stud...
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent experiments have indicated that employing nanostructures can enhance
interfacial heat transport, but the mechanism by which different structural
morphologies and dimensions contribute to the full-spectrum phonon interfacial
transport remains unclear. In this paper, a multiscale method to study the
thermal transfer at nanostructured interfaces is developed by combining density
functional calculation, Monte Carlo simulation, and diffuse mismatch method.
The changes in the transport paths and contributions to thermal conductance of
different frequency phonons caused by changes in nanostructure morphology and
size are investigated. The results show that, compared to the triangular and
trapezoidal nanostructures, the rectangular nanostructures are more beneficial
in enhancing the probability of the reflected phonons encountering the
interface, and thus the phonon interfacial transmittance. The nanostructure
makes the interfacial heat flow extremely heterogeneous, with significant
transverse heat flow occurring at the sidewalls, resulting in a new thermal
conduction pathway. The phenomena of multiple reflections and double
transmission together lead to the existence of the optimal dimension that
maximizes the nanostructures enhancement effect on interfacial heat transfer.
The optimal nanostructure width is 100 nm when the height is 100 nm and the
maximum interfacial thermal conductance enhancement ratio is 1.31. These
results can guide the design of heat transfer enhancement structures at the
interface of the actual high-power chips. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.19068 |