Thermal Contact Resistance of a Silicon Nanowire on a Substrate

Author(s):  
Dhruv Singh ◽  
Timothy S. Fisher ◽  
Jayathi Y. Murthy

Increased interest in determining the thermal contact resistance encountered in various nanoscale devices derives from its role as a critical bottleneck to thermal transport at submicron scales. In the present work, the contact resistance of one such configuration — a silicon nanowire on a Si substrate — has been studied. A model based on the phonon Boltzmann transport equation (BTE) in the solid and Fourier conduction in the surrounding gas is used, in conjunction with a previously published finite volume method. This approach enables the accurate computation and examination of the relative magnitudes of constriction resistance, air thermal resistances, and the bulk resistance of the wire on transverse heat transport. The results confirm that the effective resistance is dominated by constriction resistance even for low and moderate wire acoustic thicknesses and that the constriction resistance is well represented by ballistic-limit models. In the mesoscale regime when the constriction is partially diffusive, a simple addition of diffusive and ballistic resistances is shown to work reasonably well, in agreement with previously published estimates. For higher wire acoustic thicknesses, the effects of bulk scattering in the wire cannot be ignored and a simple additive formula is inadequate. The fluid surrounding the wire can act as a complementary parallel pathway for thermal transport; however, in the high gas-phase Knudsen regime, the constriction resistance remains the controlling factor for overall thermal conductance.

Author(s):  
Ravi Prasher ◽  
Patrick Phelan

There are two types of thermal contact resistance at the interface of two solids. One of them is due to the constriction of heat flow lines at the interface, commonly known as thermal contact resistance. The other type of constriction resistance is microscopic in nature. If the characteristic dimension of the constriction becomes comparable to the mean free path of the heat carriers then there is a ballistic component to the constriction resistance. For different materials on the two sides, thermal boundary resistance due to acoustic mismatch becomes important. In this paper a unified model is developed which accounts for both microscopic and macroscopic contact resistances.


2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (35) ◽  
pp. 24164-24170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Hong ◽  
Jingchao Zhang ◽  
Xiao Cheng Zeng

Interfacial thermal conductance plays a vital role in defining the thermal properties of nanostructured materials in which heat transfer is predominantly phonon mediated.


2011 ◽  
Vol 110-116 ◽  
pp. 977-984
Author(s):  
Jun Feng Peng ◽  
Jun Hong ◽  
Yan Zhuang

Thermal contact resistance plays an important role in many domains, such as microelectronics and nuclear reactors. This paper proposes a more comprehensive model for the prediction of constriction resistance of rough contact between nominally flat surfaces in vacuum. Firstly, a 3D geometrical asperity contact model is proposed based on the analysis of the profile of actual engineering surface. In this model, the contact is not simplified as a rough surface contacting with a perfectly smooth surface, but described as two rough surfaces. Oblique contact is considered and the effects of several parameters such as the shape of the asperity, the depth of interference, and the radial distance between the centerlines of the contacting asperities are investigated. Some mathematical derivations for constriction resistance are performed, and a series of numerical simulations are also carried out, covering a wide range of values of these parameters in practice applications. A comprehensive correlation for constriction resistance as a function of these parameters is finally obtained by nonlinear curve fitting, and it is validated through some comparisons and it can be used to predict more accurately the thermal contact resistance between rough surfaces.


Author(s):  
Heng Xiang ◽  
Pei-Xue Jiang ◽  
Qi-Xin Liu

The rapid progress and development of the synthesis and processing of materials with structures having nanometer length scales has created a demand for greater scientific understanding of thermal transport in nanoscale devices. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are emerging as a powerful tool for studying thermal conductance and phonon scattering in nanoscale objects. A thermal conduction model for spherical nanoparticles was constructed for non-equilibrium molecular dynamic (NEMD) simulations to investigate variations of the nanoparticle thermal conductivity with particle size. The results show that the nanoparticle thermal conductivity is smaller than the bulk value and that of a thin film with a thickness equal to the particle radius for the same boundary conditions. Another thermal conduction model was constructed to investigate the micro thermal contact resistance variations for various contact scenarios. These results show that the thermal contact resistance is a large part of the conduction resistance that decreases with increasing contact area and increases with increasing contact layer thickness.


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