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Role of Acoustic Phonon Transport in Near- to Asperity-Contact Heat Transfer

Authors :
Jarzembski, Amun
Tokunaga, Takuro
Crossley, Jacob
Yun, Jeonghoon
Shaskey, Cedric
Murdick, Ryan A.
Park, Inkyu
Francoeur, Mathieu
Park, Keunhan
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Acoustic phonon transport is revealed as a potential radiation-to-conduction transition mechanism for single-digit nanometer vacuum gaps. To show this, we measure heat transfer from a feedback-controlled platinum nanoheater to a laterally oscillating silicon tip as the tip-nanoheater vacuum gap distance is precisely controlled from a single-digit nanometer down to bulk contact in a high-vacuum shear force microscope. The measured thermal conductance shows a gap dependence of $d^{-5.7\pm1.1}$ in the near-contact regime, which is in good agreement with acoustic phonon transport modeling based on the atomistic Green's function framework. The obtained experimental and theoretical results suggest that acoustic phonon transport across a nanoscale vacuum gap can be the dominant heat transfer mechanism in the near- and asperity-contact regimes and can potentially be controlled by an external force stimuli.<br />Comment: 49 pages, 17 figures (including the main text, appendix, and supplemental material)

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1904.09383
Document Type :
Working Paper