Phonon Hydrodynamic Heat Conduction and Knudsen Minimum in Graphite
ORAL
Abstract
In the hydrodynamic regime, phonons drift with a nonzero collective velocity under a temperature gradient, reminiscent of viscous gas and fluid flow. The study of hydrodynamic phonon transport has spanned over half a century but has been mostly limited to cryogenic temperatures (~1 K) and more recently to low-dimensional materials. Here, we identify graphite as a three-dimensional material that supports phonon hydrodynamics at significantly higher temperatures (~100 K) based on first-principles calculations. In particular, by solving the Boltzmann equation for phonon transport in graphite ribbons, we predict that phonon Poiseuille flow and Knudsen minimum can be experimentally observed above liquid nitrogen temperature. Further, we reveal the microscopic origin of these intriguing phenomena in terms of the dependence of the effective boundary scattering rate on momentum-conserving phonon-phonon scattering processes and the collective motion of phonons. The significant hydrodynamic nature of phonon transport in graphite is attributed to its strong intralayer sp2 hybrid bonding and weak van der Waals interlayer interactions.
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Presenters
Zhiwei Ding
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Authors
Zhiwei Ding
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Jiawei Zhou
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology-MIT
Bai Song
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Vazrik Chiloyan
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT
Mingda Li
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT
Te-Huan Liu
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Gang Chen
Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology