scholarly journals Atomic Simulation of the Melting and Mechanical Behaviors of Silicon Nanowires

Crystals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 1010
Author(s):  
Dandan Zhao ◽  
Jing Li ◽  
Lin Zhang

Molecular dynamics simulations using a three-body potential show that the melting and mechanical behaviors of silicon nanowires are strongly dependent on their cross-section area. For the wire with a small cross-section area, rearrangements of surface atoms greatly affect thermal stability in a relatively low temperature regime. For these wires with a relatively large area, while some surface atoms adjust their positions, most of the interior atoms hold their tetrahedra packing patterns. At a high temperature, the accumulation of structural disorder can quickly extend into the entire wire, which resembles the melting of the bulk phase. By applying the uniaxial tensile, these silicon nanowires present the typical mechanical behavior of plastic materials. The atomic local stress in the necking region is apparently larger than that outside of the necking region. As the cross-section area becomes large, both the yield strength and tensile strength increase. With the increasing temperature, the elasticity decreases significantly.

Nanomaterials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Li ◽  
Gao Cheng ◽  
Yongjian Liu ◽  
Dan Zhong

The mechanical and thermal properties of graphene kirigami are strongly dependent on the tailoring structures. Here, thermal conductivity of three typical graphene kirigami structures, including square kirigami graphene, reentrant hexagonal honeycomb structure, and quadrilateral star structure under uniaxial strain are explored using molecular dynamics simulations. We find that the structural deformation of graphene kirigami is sensitive to its tailoring geometry. It influences thermal conductivity of graphene by changing heat flux scattering, heat path, and cross-section area. It is found that the factor of cross-section area can lead to four times difference of thermal conductivity in the large deformation system. Our results are elucidated based on analysis of micro-heat flux, geometry deformation, and atomic lattice deformation. These insights enable us to design of more efficient thermal management devices with elaborated graphene kirigami materials.


1989 ◽  
Vol 149 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Arce ◽  
L. Ley

ABSTRACTRandom Telegraphic Noise (RTN) with an amplitude of about 1% has been observed in the current through a-Si:H/a-Si1−xNx.:H double barrier structures. The area of the devices, 0.25 mm2, is five orders of magnitude larger than the area of the devices where RTN has previously been observed. The power spectra of the noise can be fitted by a superposition of Lorentzians from which average switching times are deduced. The switching times are thermally activated with activation energies between 0.2 and 0.6 eV and depend on bias voltage. Assuming that the current through these structures is confined to microchannels of cross section area < lμm2 the RTN and its characteristics are explained by the random charging and discharging of individual traps placed in the vicinity of the current channel.


Author(s):  
Alexis Giauque ◽  
Maxime Huet ◽  
Franck Clero ◽  
Sébastien Ducruix ◽  
Franck Richecoeur

Indirect combustion noise originates from the acceleration of nonuniform temperature or high vorticity regions when convected through a nozzle or a turbine. In a recent contribution (Giauque et al., 2012, “Analytical Analysis of Indirect Combustion Noise in Subcritical Nozzles,” ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbies Power, 134(11), p. 111202) the authors have presented an analytical thermoacoustic model providing the indirect combustion noise generated by a subcritical nozzle when forced with entropy waves. This model explicitly takes into account the effect of the local changes in the cross-section area along the configuration of interest. In this article, the authors introduce this model into an optimization procedure in order to minimize or maximize the thermoacoustic noise emitted by arbitrarily shaped nozzles operating under subsonic conditions. Each component of the complete algorithm is described in detail. The evolution of the cross-section changes are introduced using Bezier's splines, which provide the necessary freedom to actually achieve arbitrary shapes. Bezier's polar coordinates constitute the parameters defining the geometry of a given individual nozzle. Starting from a population of nozzles of random shapes, it is shown that a specifically designed genetic optimization algorithm coupled with the analytical model converges at will toward a quieter or noisier population. As already described by Bloy (Bloy, 1979, “The Pressure Waves Produced by the Convection of Temperature Disturbances in High Subsonic Nozzle Flows,” J. Fluid Mech., 94(3), pp. 465–475), the results therefore confirm the significant dependence of the indirect combustion noise with respect to the shape of the nozzle, even when the operating regime is kept constant. It appears that the quietest nozzle profile evolves almost linearly along its converging and diverging sections, leading to a square evolution of the cross-section area. Providing insight into the underlying physical reason leading to the difference in the noise emission between two extreme individuals, the integral value of the source term of the equation describing the behavior of the acoustic pressure of the nozzle is considered. It is shown that its evolution with the frequency can be related to the global acoustic emission. Strong evidence suggest that the noise emission increases as the source term in the converging and diverging parts less compensate each other. The main result of this article is the definition and proposition of an acoustic emission factor, which can be used as a surrogate to the complex determination of the exact acoustic levels in the nozzle for the thermoacoustic shape optimization of nozzle flows. This acoustic emission factor, which is much faster to compute, only involves the knowledge of the evolution of the cross-section area and the inlet thermodynamic and velocity characteristics to be computed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 365-366 ◽  
pp. 1211-1216
Author(s):  
Fan Zhang ◽  
Peng Yun Song

The cross-section area of straight fin is often considered to be equal in the thermal analyses of straight fin, but sometimes it is unequalin actual situation. Taking a straight fin with two unequal cross-sectional areas as an example,an analytical method of heat conduction for unequal section straight fin is presented. The analytical expressions of temperature field and heat dissipating capacity about the fin,which has a smaller cross-section area near the fin base and a larger one, is obtained respectively. The calculation results of the unequal cross-section are fully consistent with the equal area one, so the method is proved right. The results show that the larger the cross section areanear the base,the better is the heat transfer, and the temperature at the base with larger cross-section area is lower than that with smaller cross-section area when the amount of heat is fixed.


1976 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. S. Hickman ◽  
A. E. Kassem ◽  
L. H. Liang

The rotational temperature at pressures near 1 atm and at room temperature has been successfully measured using spectra obtained in an intracavity Raman scattering experiment. The accuracy of the method is sufficient to allow local temperature measurement of multicomponent gases with no disturbance in the temperature field. The advantage of the method lies in the fact that it does not require knowledge of the relative scattering cross-section area of the component gases.


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