| Literature DB >> 30184711 |
Dhruv Singhal1, Jessy Paterson2, Dimitri Tainoff2, Jacques Richard2, Meriam Ben-Khedim2, Pascal Gentile1, Laurent Cagnon2, Daniel Bourgault2, Denis Buttard1, Olivier Bourgeois2.
Abstract
The 3ω method is a dynamic measurement technique developed for determining the thermal conductivity of thin films or semi-infinite bulk materials. A simplified model is often applied to deduce the thermal conductivity from the slope of the real part of the ac temperature amplitude as a function of the logarithm of frequency, which in-turn brings a limitation on the kind of samples under observation. In this work, we have measured the thermal conductivity of a forest of nanowires embedded in nanoporous alumina membranes using the 3ω method. An analytical solution of 2D heat conduction is then used to model the multilayer system, considering the anisotropic thermal properties of the different layers, substrate thermal conductivity, and their thicknesses. Data treatment is performed by fitting the experimental results with the 2D model on two different sets of nanowires (silicon and BiSbTe) embedded in the matrix of nanoporous alumina templates, having thermal conductivities that differ by at least one order of magnitude. These experimental results show that this method extends the applicability of the 3ω technique to more complex systems having anisotropic thermal properties.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30184711 DOI: 10.1063/1.5025319
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Sci Instrum ISSN: 0034-6748 Impact factor: 1.523