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Cited 9 time in webofscience Cited 10 time in scopus
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Impact of thermally dead volume on phonon conduction along silicon nanoladders

Authors
Park, WoosungSohn, JoonRomano, GiuseppeKodama, TakashiSood, AdityaKatz, Joseph S.Kim, Brian S. Y.So, HongyunAhn, Ethan C.Asheghi, MehdiKolpak, Alexie M.Goodson, Kenneth E.
Issue Date
Jun-2018
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
Citation
NANOSCALE, v.10, no.23, pp.11117 - 11122
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NANOSCALE
Volume
10
Number
23
Start Page
11117
End Page
11122
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/16912
DOI
10.1039/c8nr01788c
ISSN
2040-3364
Abstract
Thermal conduction in complex periodic nanostructures remains a key area of open questions and research, and a particularly provocative and challenging detail is the impact of nanoscale material volumes that do not lie along the optimal line of sight for conduction. Here, we experimentally study thermal transport in silicon nanoladders, which feature two orthogonal heat conduction paths: unobstructed line-of-sight channels in the axial direction and interconnecting bridges between them. The nanoladders feature an array of rectangular holes in a 10 m long straight beam with a 970 nm wide and 75 nm thick cross-section. We vary the pitch of these holes from 200 nm to 1100 nm to modulate the contribution of bridges to the net transport of heat in the axial direction. The effective thermal conductivity, corresponding to reduced heat flux, decreases from approximate to 45 W m(-1) K-1 to approximate to 31 W m(-1) K-1 with decreasing pitch. By solving the Boltzmann transport equation using phonon mean free paths taken from ab initio calculations, we model thermal transport in the nanoladders, and experimental results show excellent agreement with the predictions to within approximate to 11%. A combination of experiments and calculations shows that with decreasing pitch, thermal transport in nanoladders approaches the counterpart in a straight beam equivalent to the line-of-sight channels, indicating that the bridges constitute a thermally dead volume. This study suggests that ballistic effects are dictated by the line-of-sight channels, providing key insights into thermal conduction in nanostructured metamaterials.
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