Nanomaterials publishes research paper by MSc research student Jianhui Jiang on the important effect of phonon hydrodynamic transport on thermal conductivity convergence

Created Time:2022-08-18 Click Rate:68

In August, Professor Jie Chen's group at the Centre for Phononics in the School of Physical Sciences and Engineering published a paper, entitled "How hydrodynamic phonon transport determines the convergence of thermal conductivity in two-dimensional materials", focuses on and explains the special transport of phonons in two-dimensional materials and the difficulty of convergence of thermal conductivity.

The phonon Boltzmann transport equation combined with first-principles calculation has achieved great success in exploring the lattice thermal conductivity (κ) of various materials. However, the convergence of the predicted κ is a critical issue, leading to quite scattered results recorded in the literature, even for the same material. In this paper, we explore the origin for the convergence of thermal conductivity in two-dimensional (2D) materials. Two kinds of typical 2D materials, graphene and silicene, are studied, and the bulk silicon is also compared as a control system for a three-dimensional material. The effect of the cutoff radius (rc) in the third-order interatomic force constants on κ is studied for these three materials. It is found that that κ of these three materials exhibits diverse convergence behaviors with respect to rc, which coincides very well with the strength of hydrodynamic phonon transport. By further analyzing the phonon lifetime and scattering rates, we reveal that the dominance of the normal scattering process gives rise to the hydrodynamic phonon transport in both graphene and silicene, which results in long-range interaction and a large lifetime of low-frequency flexural acoustic phonons, while the same phenomenon is absent in bulk silicon. Our study highlights the importance of long-range interaction associated with hydrodynamic phonon transport in determining the thermal conductivity of 2D materials.

Figure 1. The room temperature thermal conductivity  with respect to the Q-grid for different nearest neighbors (NNs). (a) Graphene. (b) Silicene. (c) Bulk silicon.

Figure 2. The frequency-resolved N-scattering rate (ΓN(ω)) and U-scattering rate (ΓU(ω)) at 300 K with different NNs in (a,b) graphene, (d,e) silicene, and (g,h) silicon. The ensemble-averaged scattering rates (ΓN and ΓU) for three acoustic phonons are shown in (c) graphene, (f) silicene, and (i) silicon, respectively.

The correlation between phonon hydrodynamic transport and thermal conductivity convergence proposed in this work provides direct evidence for a deeper understanding of the phonon scattering mechanism and its effect on heat conduction, and will have important implications for the study of thermal transport in low-dimensional nanomaterials and bulk materials.

Master student Jianhui Jiang is the first author of the paper, and our Professor Jie Chen is the corresponding author.

This project is supported in part by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality, and so on.

Link: https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12162854

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