| Literature DB >> 30678318 |
Roman Anufriev1, Masahiro Nomura2,3.
Abstract
Artificial periodic nanostructures, known as phononic crystals, promise to control the thermal properties of nanostructures in the coherent regime, which can be achieved in semiconductors at low temperatures. Here, we study coherent thermal conduction in silicon nanowires with added periodic wings at sub-Kelvin temperature. Our simulations show that the added periodic wings flatten the phonon dispersion and thus reduce the thermal conductance. We investigate the dependence of this reduction on the size of the wings and conclude that the reduction is mainly caused by the periodicity of the wings, rather than by local resonances in them. These findings help to better understand the mechanisms controlling coherent heat conduction in periodic resonant nanostructures.Entities:
Keywords: nanowires; phononic crystals; silicon; thermal conductivity
Year: 2019 PMID: 30678318 PMCID: PMC6410301 DOI: 10.3390/nano9020142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Schematic of a simulated silicon nanowire with wings (a = 300 nm, n = 60 nm, w = 150 nm, d = 200 nm, and h = 145 nm). (b) Phonon dispersion of the nanowire with wings plotted with the dispersion of pristine nanowire (blue dashed lines) and eigenfrequencies (LR) of the wings (black dashed line). The color of the dispersion branches indicates the physical location of the mode: Blue shows the modes inside the nanowire and black shows the modes inside the wings. (c,d) Displacement fields of the modes indicated in (b) by circles.
Figure 2The relative thermal conductance of nanowires with wings (a = 300 nm, n = 60 nm, and h = 145 nm) as a function of (a) depth and (b) width of the wings; simulated at 0.5 K.