MRS Meetings and Events

 

EN07.09.02 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Narrowband Thermal Phonon Motion Under Atomic-Scale Local Resonance Conditions

When and Where

Apr 24, 2024
4:00pm - 4:15pm

Room 327, Level 3, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Mahmoud Hussein1,Albert Beardo1,Paul Desmarchelier2,Prajit Rawte1,Chia-Nien Tsai1,Konstantinos Termentzidis2

University of Colorado Boulder1,University of Lyon2

Abstract

Mahmoud Hussein1,Albert Beardo1,Paul Desmarchelier2,Prajit Rawte1,Chia-Nien Tsai1,Konstantinos Termentzidis2

University of Colorado Boulder1,University of Lyon2
Thermal energy conduction in nanostructures involves various atomic-scale phonon mechanisms with a complex interplay between wavelike and particle behavior. In nanoscale configurations where the feature sizes are smaller or on the order of the phonon mean free path, it is possible to engineer the wavelike behavior to, for example, impede heat conduction—which is favorable for thermoelectric energy conversion. While reducing the dimensionality or introducing obstacles to the heat flow in nanostructures can reduce the thermal conductivity [1], it can also limit the thermoelectric figure of merit ZT. Control of sub-phonon mean free path properties, on the other hand, offers the potential to improve ZT. One approach along this path involves the introduction of resonating substructures to a conventional material, such as silicon, to form a <i>nanophononic metamaterial</i> (NPM) [2]. These substructures create standing phonon waves that couple with the in-plane propagating phonons causing a significant modification of the dispersion relation, reduction of the phonon group velocities, creation of mode localizations, and ultimately decreasing the lattice thermal conductivity—all without affecting the electronic properties [3].<br/><br/>In this work, we use narrowband wave-packet excitations to investigate the impact of local resonances on the room temperature phonon transport in NPMs in the form of nanopillared membranes and compare with corresponding nanostructures that do not include local resonances. Our results provide an in-depth analysis elucidation of the underlying phonon localization effects associated with the local resonances. By controlling the wave-packet frequency, we are able to distinguish the role of the local resonances on the thermal energy propagation from other effects that also influence the total lattice thermal conductivity such as phonon-boundary scattering. These observations open exciting new possibilities for experiments to further unlock the potential of atomic-scale local resonances.<br/><br/>[1] D. Li, Y.Wu, P. Kim, L. Shi, P. Yang, and A. Majumdar, <i>Appl. Phys. Lett</i>. <b>83</b>, 2934-2936, (2003).<br/>[2] B.L. Davis and M.I. Hussein, <i>Phys. Rev. Lett</i>. <b>112</b>, 055505, (2014).<br/>[3] B.T. Spann, J.C. Weber, M.D. Brubakera, T.E. Harveya, L. Yang, H. Honarvar, C.-N. Tsai, A.C. Treglia, M. Lee, M.I. Hussein, and K.A. Bertness, <i>Adv. Mater</i>. <b>35</b>, 2209779 (2023).

Keywords

thermal conductivity

Symposium Organizers

Woochul Kim, Yonsei University
Sheng Shen, Carnegie Mellon University
Sunmi Shin, National University of Singapore
Sebastian Volz, The University of Tokyo

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature