Phonon Heat Conduction in Micro- and Nano-Cylindrical and Spherical Media

Author(s):  
Taofang Zeng

Phonon heat conduction in thin films and superlattices of dielectric materials has attracted extensive attentions in the past decade. Nonetheless, a wide range of micro- and nanoscale thermal problems is associated with non-planar geometries such as spherical and cylindrical media. With the rapid growth of research and development in nano-materials and nanostructures, understanding of heat transfer in micro- and nano-cylindrical and spherical media becomes important. Examples include cladding and coating for optic fibers and nanowires.

Author(s):  
Amanie N. Abdelmessih ◽  
Erik C. McGuire

An enormous number of empirical and analytical closed solution, single phase, internal flow heat transfer correlations exist in the open literature. This article is a compilation of single phase internal convective heat transfer correlations in straight, circular conduits. These correlations cover convective internal flow of various Newtonian fluids under a wide range of heating conditions, and orientations for the different flow regimes. In the past some engineers extended the use of some correlations beyond their limits. The purpose of this article is to compile internal flow heat transfer correlations in one source, to alleviate time required by the practicing engineer to research the literature for correlations to meet specific conditions.


Author(s):  
Gary J. Cheng ◽  
Daniel Pirzada ◽  
Xin Ai ◽  
Ben Li

The results of numerical simulation of heat transfer phenomena in GaAs thin films irradiated by a pulsed laser are presented. A numerical algorithm involving a discontinuous Galerkin finite element method for the solution of hyperbolic heat conduction is used to solve the dual-phase-lag heat conduction equation The effects of different process parameters on heat propagation are analyzed. The heat conduction mode after pulsed laser irradiation is strongly dependent upon the incident laser energy density, film thickness and pulse duration. The heat transfer behavior for nano-, pico- and femto- second pulses has been studied and compared. A wave-type heat transfer phenomena was observed when pulse duration is of the order of relaxation time of the material being heated. It was found that for sub-picosecond pulses, the heat transfer occurs only by a thermal shock wave.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaona Randrianalisoa ◽  
Dominique Baillis

Heat conduction in submicron crystalline materials can be well modeled by the Boltzmann transport equation (BTE). The Monte Carlo method is effective in computing the solution of the BTE. These past years, transient Monte Carlo simulations have been developed, but they are generally memory demanding. This paper presents an alternative Monte Carlo method for analyzing heat conduction in such materials. The numerical scheme is derived from past Monte Carlo algorithms for steady-state radiative heat transfer and enables us to understand well the steady-state nature of phonon transport. Moreover, this algorithm is not memory demanding and uses very few iteration to achieve convergence. It could be computationally more advantageous than transient Monte Carlo approaches in certain cases. Similar to the famous Mazumder and Majumdar’s transient algorithm (2001, “Monte Carlo Study of Phonon Transport in Solid Thin Films Including Dispersion and Polarization,” ASME J. Heat Transfer, 123, pp. 749–759), the dual polarizations of phonon propagation, the nonlinear dispersion relationships, the transition between the two polarization branches, and the nongray treatment of phonon relaxation times are accounted for. Scatterings by different mechanisms are treated individually, and the creation and/or destruction of phonons due to scattering is implicitly taken into account. The proposed method successfully predicts exact solutions of phonon transport across a gallium arsenide film in the ballistic regime and that across a silicon film in the diffusion regime. Its capability to model the phonon scattering by boundaries and impurities on the phonon transport has been verified. The current simulations agree well with the previous predictions and the measurement of thermal conductivity along silicon thin films and along silicon nanowires of widths greater than 22nm. This study confirms that the dispersion curves and relaxation times of bulk silicon are not appropriate to model phonon propagation along silicon nanowires of 22nm width.


2007 ◽  
Vol 1035 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael A. Reshchikov ◽  
B. Nemeth ◽  
J. Nause ◽  
J. Xie ◽  
B. Hertog ◽  
...  

AbstractWe studied several photoluminescence (PL) bands in undoped, Li-, Ga-, and N-doped high-quality ZnO bulk crystals and thin films grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). By analyzing PL in a wide range of excitation power densities, sample temperature, and decay time after a laser pulse, we distinguished and analyzed more than 10 broad bands with unique luminescence properties. Among these bands, only the Cu-related green band with a characteristic fine structure and the Li-related orange band were well-studied and reliably identified in the past.


1975 ◽  
Vol 97 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. S. Chen ◽  
M. E. Lohman

An analytical study is performed to determine the effects of axial heat conduction and transverse curvature on laminar forced convective heat transfer of liquid metals along a circular cylinder. The flow and thermal boundary layers for this problem are nonsimilar, the non-similarity arising both from the transverse curvature ξ = (4/R)(νx/u∞)1/2 of the cylindrical surface and from the axial heat conduction effect expressible as Ω = 1/Pex, where Pex is the local Peclet number. The governing equations are solved by the local nonsimilarity method in which all the terms in the conservation equations are retained and only terms in the derived subsidiary equations are selectively deleted according to the levels of truncation. Numerical results are presented for liquid metals having representative Prandtl numbers of 0.03, 0.008, and 0.003 over a wide range of ξ values from 0 (i.e., a flat plate) to 4.0 and Ω values from 0 (i.e., without axial heat conduction effect) to 0.20. The results indicate that the local surface heat transfer rate increases with an increase in the transverse curvature of the cylindrical surface, an increase in Prandtl number, and an increase in the axial heat conduction parameter or a decrease in Peclet number.


2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (3/4) ◽  
pp. 916-949 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.M Wheeler ◽  
K K Tamma

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview and some recent advances in the models, analysis and simulation of thermal transport of phonons as related to the field of microscale/macroscale heat conduction in solids. The efforts focus upon a fairly comprehensive overview of the subject matter from a unified standpoint highlighting the various approximations inherent in the thermal models. Subsequently, the numerical formulations and illustrations using the current state-of-the-art are provided. Design/methodology/approach – This paper is dedicated to the approximate solution to the relaxation time phonon Boltzmann equation (BE). While original contributions are pointed out and addressed appropriately, the efforts and contributions will be focussed on a relatively complete overview highlighting the field from one unified standpoint and clearly stating all assumptions that go into the approximations inherent to existing models. The contents will be divided as follows: In the first section the authors will give an overview of semi-classical phonon transport physics. Then the authors will discuss the equation of phonon radiative transport (EPRT) and its approximations—the ballistic-diffusive approximation (BDA) and the new heat equation (NHE). Next the authors derive and discuss the C-F model. A numerical discretization method valid for all models is then presented followed by results to numerical simulations and discussion. Findings – From a unified treatment based on the introduction of an energy distribution function, the authors have derived the EPRT and its two well-known approximations: BDA and NHE. For completeness and to provide a vehicle for a general numerical discretization approach, the authors have also included analysis of the C-F model and the parabolic and hyperbolic descriptions of heat transfer along with it. The approximation of angular dependence of phonons in radiation-like descriptions of transport has been given special attention. The assumption of isotropy was found to be of paramount importance in the formulation of position space models for phononic thermal transport. For the thin film problem considered here, the NHE along with the proper boundary condition appears to be the best choice to approximate the phonon BE. Not only does it provide predictions that are in excellent agreement with EPRT, it does not require the discretization of phase space making it far more computationally efficient. Originality/value – The authors hope this work will help dispel the idea that since Fourier’s law describes diffusion (under limiting assumptions) and it has shown to be ineffective in describing heat transfer for very thin films, that diffusion cannot describe heat transfer in thin films and one should look to a radiative description instead. If one considers diffusion in the sense of random motion, as invisaged by the original builders of the subject (Smoluchowski, Einstein, Ornstein et al.), instead of a temperature gradient, the idea that diffusion can govern thermal transport at this scale is not surprising. Indeed, the NHE is essentially a diffusion equation that describes the motion of particles up to the point of true randomness (isotropy) as well as thereafter.


Author(s):  
A. Strojnik ◽  
J.W. Scholl ◽  
V. Bevc

The electron accelerator, as inserted between the electron source (injector) and the imaging column of the HVEM, is usually a strong lens and should be optimized in order to ensure high brightness over a wide range of accelerating voltages and illuminating conditions. This is especially true in the case of the STEM where the brightness directly determines the highest resolution attainable. In the past, the optical behavior of accelerators was usually determined for a particular configuration. During the development of the accelerator for the Arizona 1 MEV STEM, systematic investigation was made of the major optical properties for a variety of electrode configurations, number of stages N, accelerating voltages, 1 and 10 MEV, and a range of injection voltages ϕ0 = 1, 3, 10, 30, 100, 300 kV).


Author(s):  
A. K. Rai ◽  
P. P. Pronko

Several techniques have been reported in the past to prepare cross(x)-sectional TEM specimen. These methods are applicable when the sample surface is uniform. Examples of samples having uniform surfaces are ion implanted samples, thin films deposited on substrates and epilayers grown on substrates. Once device structures are fabricated on the surfaces of appropriate materials these surfaces will no longer remain uniform. For samples with uniform surfaces it does not matter which part of the surface region remains in the thin sections of the x-sectional TEM specimen since it is similar everywhere. However, in order to study a specific region of a device employing x-sectional TEM, one has to make sure that the desired region is thinned. In the present work a simple way to obtain thin sections of desired device region is described.


2020 ◽  
Vol 04 (04) ◽  
pp. 369-372
Author(s):  
Paul B. Romesser ◽  
Christopher H. Crane

AbstractEvasion of immune recognition is a hallmark of cancer that facilitates tumorigenesis, maintenance, and progression. Systemic immune activation can incite tumor recognition and stimulate potent antitumor responses. While the concept of antitumor immunity is not new, there is renewed interest in tumor immunology given the clinical success of immune modulators in a wide range of cancer subtypes over the past decade. One particularly interesting, yet exceedingly rare phenomenon, is the abscopal response, characterized by a potent systemic antitumor response following localized tumor irradiation presumably attributed to reactivation of antitumor immunity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-172
Author(s):  
Thomas Leitch

Building on Tzvetan Todorov's observation that the detective novel ‘contains not one but two stories: the story of the crime and the story of the investigation’, this essay argues that detective novels display a remarkably wide range of attitudes toward the several pasts they represent: the pasts of the crime, the community, the criminal, the detective, and public history. It traces a series of defining shifts in these attitudes through the evolution of five distinct subgenres of detective fiction: exploits of a Great Detective like Sherlock Holmes, Golden Age whodunits that pose as intellectual puzzles to be solved, hardboiled stories that invoke a distant past that the present both breaks with and echoes, police procedurals that unfold in an indefinitely extended present, and historical mysteries that nostalgically fetishize the past. It concludes with a brief consideration of genre readers’ own ambivalent phenomenological investment in the past, present, and future each detective story projects.


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