Heat Transfer Predictions for Micro-/Nanochannels at the Atomistic Level Using Combined Molecular Dynamics and Monte Carlo Techniques

2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. V. Nedea ◽  
A. J. Markvoort ◽  
A. A. van Steenhoven ◽  
P. A. J. Hilbers

The thermal behavior of a gas confined between two parallel walls is investigated. Wall effects such as hydrophobic or hydrophilic wall interactions are studied, and the effect on the heat flux and other characteristic parameters such as density and temperature is shown. For a dilute gas, the dependence on gas-wall interactions of the temperature profile between the walls for the incident and reflected molecules is obtained using molecular dynamics (MD). From these profiles, the effective accommodation coefficients for different interactions and different mass fluid/wall ratio are derived. We show that Monte Carlo (MC) with Maxwell boundary conditions based on the accommodation coefficient gives good results for heat flux predictions when compared with pure molecular dynamics simulations. We use these effective coefficients to compute the heat flux predictions for a dense gas using MD and MC with Maxwell-like boundary conditions.

Author(s):  
S. V. Nedea ◽  
A. J. Markvoort ◽  
A. A. van Steenhoven ◽  
P. A. J. Hilbers

The thermal behavior of a gas confined between two parallel walls is investigated. Wall effects like hydrophobic or hydrophilic wall interactions are studied, and the effect on the heat flux and other characteristic parameters like density and temperature is shown. For a dilute gas, the dependence on gas-wall interactions of the temperature profile between the walls for the incident and reflected molecules is obtained using Molecular Dynamics. From these profiles, the effective accomodation coefficients for different interactions and different mass fluid/wall ratio are derived. We show that MC with Maxwell boundary conditions based on the accomodation coefficient gives good results for heat flux predictions when compared to pure Molecular Dynamics simulations. We use these effective coefficients to compute the heat flux predictions for a dense gas using MD and MC with Maxwell-like boundary conditions.


Author(s):  
K. J. Daun ◽  
F. Liu ◽  
G. J. Smallwood

Time-resolved laser-induced incandescence demands precise knowledge of the thermal accommodation coefficient, but little is known about the gas-surface scattering physics underlying this parameter. This paper presents a molecular dynamics simulation that shows how the thermal accommodation coefficient is influenced by gas molecular mass and the gas temperature. The MD results also define scattering kernels that form boundary conditions in DSMC simulations of heat and momentum transfer between soot aggregates and surrounding gas molecules.


1988 ◽  
Vol 141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent J. Lewis ◽  
Normand Mousseau ◽  
FranÇois Drolet

AbstractA new algorithm for generating fully-coordinated hydrogenated amorphous silicon models with periodic boundary conditions is presented. The hydrogen is incorporated into an a-Si matrix by a bond-switching process similar to that proposed by Wooten, Winer, and Weaire, making sure that four-fold coordination is preserved and that no rings with less than 5 members are created. After each addition of hydrogen, the structure is fully relaxed. The models so obtained, to be used as input to molecular dynamics simulations, are found to be in good agreement with experiment. A model with 12 at.% H is discussed in detail.


Author(s):  
Behrouz Arash ◽  
Quan Wang

Free vibration of single- and double-layered graphene sheets is investigated by employing nonlocal continuum theory and molecular dynamics simulations. Results show that the classical elastic model overestimated the resonant frequencies of the sheets by a percentage as high as 62%. The dependence of small-scale effects, sizes of sheets, boundary conditions, and number of layers on vibrational characteristic of single- and double-layered graphene sheets is studied. The resonant frequencies predicted by the nonlocal elastic plate theory are verified by the molecular dynamics simulations, and the nonlocal parameter is calibrated through the verification process. The simulation results reveal that the calibrated nonlocal parameter depends on boundary conditions and vibrational modes. The nonlocal plate model is found to be indispensable in vibration analysis of grapheme sheets with a length less than 8 nm on their sides.


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