EFFECTS OF APERIODICITY AND ROUGHNESS ON COHERENT HEAT CONDUCTION IN SUPERLATTICES

B Qiu and G Chen and ZT Tian, NANOSCALE AND MICROSCALE THERMOPHYSICAL ENGINEERING, 19, 272-278 (2015).

DOI: 10.1080/15567265.2015.1102186

Coherent phonon heat conduction has recently been confirmed experimentally in superlattice structures. Such traveling coherent phonon waves in superlattices lead to a linear increase in thermal conductivity as the number of periods increases. For applications such as thermal insulation or thermoelectrics, minimization of the phonon coherent effect is desirable. In this work, we use molecular dynamics simulations to study how to control coherent heat conduction in superlattices (SLs). It is found that either aperiodic SLs or SLs with rough interfaces can significantly disrupt coherent heat conduction when the interface densities are high. For sample thickness less than 125 nm, aperiodic SLs with perfect interfaces are found to have the lowest thermal conductivity. We use the atomic Green's function method to examine the phonon dynamics. The impact of either aperiodicity or interface roughness is attributed to reduced transmittance. Such impact diminishes as the interface density reduces.

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