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Thermal and thermoelectric properties of nanostructured materials and interfacesLiao, Hao-Hsiang 19 December 2012 (has links)
Many modern technologies are enabled by the use of thin films and/or nanostructured composite materials. For example, many thermoelectric devices, solar cells, power electronics, thermal barrier coatings, and hard disk drives contain nanostructured materials where the thermal conductivity of the material is a critical parameter for the device performance. At the nanoscale, the mean free path and wavelength of heat carriers may become comparable to or smaller than the size of a nanostructured material and/or device. For nanostructured materials made from semiconductors and insulators, the additional phonon scattering mechanisms associated with the high density of interfaces and boundaries introduces additional resistances that can significantly change the thermal conductivity of the material as compared to a macroscale counterpart. Thus, better understanding and control of nanoscale heat conduction in solids is important scientifically and for the engineering applications mentioned above.
In this dissertation, I discuss my work in two areas dealing with nanoscale thermal transport: (1) I describe my development and advancement of important thermal characterization tools for measurements of thermal and thermoelectric properties of a variety of materials from thin films to nanostructured bulk systems, and (2) I discuss my measurements on several materials systems done with these characterization tools.
First, I describe the development, assembly, and modification of a time-domain thermoreflectance (TDTR) system that we use to measure the thermal conductivity and the interface thermal conductance of a variety of samples including nanocrystalline alloys of Ni-Fe and Co-P, bulk metallic glasses, and other thin films. Next, a unique thermoelectric measurement system was designed and assembled for measurements of electrical resistivity and thermopower of thermoelectric materials in the temperature range of 20 to 350 °C. Finally, a commercial Anter Flashline 3000 thermal diffusivity measurement system is used to measure the thermal diffusivitiy and heat capacity of bulk materials at high temperatures. With regards to the specific experiments, I examine the thermal conductivity and interface thermal conductance of two different types of nanocrystalline metallic alloys of nickel-iron and cobalt-phosphorus. I find that the thermal conductivity of the nanocrystalline alloys is reduced by a factor of approximately two from the thermal conductivity measured on metallic alloys with larger grain sizes. With subsequent molecular dynamics simulations performed by a collaborator, and my own electrical conductivity measurements, we determine that this strong reduction in thermal conductivity is the result of increased electron scattering at the grain boundaries, and that the phonon component of the thermal conductivity is largely unchanged by the grain boundaries.
We also examine four complex bulk metallic glass (BMG) materials with compositions of Zr₅₀Cu₄₀Al₁₀, Cu<sub>46.25</sub>Zr<sub>44.25</sub>Al<sub>7.5</sub>Er₂, Fe₄₈Cr₁₅Mo₁₄C₁₅B₆Er₂, and Ti<sub>41.5</sub>Zr<sub>2.5</sub>Hf₅Cu<sub>42.5</sub>Ni<sub>7.5</sub>Si₁. From these measurements, I find that the addition of even a small percentage of heavy atoms (i.e. Hf and Er) into complex disordered BMG structures can create a significant reduction in the phonon thermal conductivity of these materials. This work also indicates that the addition of these heavy atoms does not disrupt electron transport to the degree with which thermal transport is reduced. / Ph. D.
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Heat Transport across Dissimilar MaterialsShukla, Nitin 08 June 2009 (has links)
All interfaces offer resistance to heat transport. As the size of a device or structure approaches nanometer lengthscales, the contribution of the interface thermal resistance often becomes comparable to the intrinsic thermal resistance offered by the device or structure itself. In many microelectronic devices, heat has to transfer across a metal-nonmetal interface, and a better understanding about the origins of this interface thermal conductance (inverse of the interface thermal resistance) is critical in improving the performance of these devices. In this dissertation, heat transport across different metal-nonmetal interfaces are investigated with the primary goal of gaining qualitative and quantitative insight into the heat transport mechanisms across such interfaces. A time-domain thermoreflectance (TDTR) system is used to measure the thermal properties at the nanoscale. TDTR is an optical pump-probe technique, and it is capable of measuring thermal conductivity, k, and interface thermal conductance, G, simultaneously.
The first study examines k and G for amorphous and crystalline Zr47Cu31Al13Ni9 metallic alloys that are in contact with poly-crystalline Y2O3. The motivation behind this study is to determine the relative importance of energy coupling mechanisms such as electron-phonon or phonon-phonon coupling across the interface by changing the material structure (from amorphous to crystalline), but not the composition. From the TDTR measurements k=4.5 W m-1 K-1 for the amorphous metallic glass of Zr47Cu31Al13Ni9, and k=5.0 W m-1 K-1 for the crystalline Zr47Cu31Al13Ni9. TDTR also gives G=23 MW m-2 K-1 for the metallic glass/Y2O3 interface and G=26 MW m-2 K-1 for the interface between the crystalline Zr47Cu31Al13Ni9 and Y2O3. The thermal conductivity of the poly-crystalline Y2O3 layer is found to be k=5.0 W m-1 K-1. Despite the small difference between k and G for the two alloys, the results are repeatable and they indicate that the structure of the alloy plays a role in the electron-phonon coupling and interface conductance.
The second experimental study examines the effect of nickel nanoparticle size on the thermal transport in multilayer nanocomposites. These nanocomposites consist of five alternating layers of nickel nanoparticles and yttria stabilized zirconia (YSZ) spacer layers that are grown with pulsed laser deposition. Using TDTR, thermal conductivities of k=1.8, 2.4, 2.3, and 3.0 W m-1 K-1 are found for nanocomposites with nickel nanoparticle diameters of 7, 21, 24, and 38 nm, respectively, and k=2.5 W m-1 K-1 for a single 80 nm thick layer of YSZ. The results indicate that the overall thermal conductivity of these nanocomposites is strongly influenced by the Ni nanoparticle size and the interface thermal conductance between the Ni particles and the YSZ matrix. An effective medium theory is used to estimate the lower limits for the interface thermal conductance between the nickel nanoparticles and the YSZ matrix (G>170 MW m-2 K-1), and the nickel nanoparticle thermal conductivity. / Ph. D.
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Laser-Ultrasonic Measurement of Single-Crystal Elastic Constants from Polycrystalline Samples by Measuring and Modeling Surface Acoustic Wave VelocitiesDu, Xinpeng 07 September 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Oxidation Behavior and Thermal Conductivity of Thermoelectric SnSe as well as Laser Powder Bed Fusion Process Modeling and Validation through In-situ Monitoring and Ex-situ CharacterizationLi, Yi 17 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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