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contributor authorPamela M. Norris
contributor authorPatrick E. Hopkins
date accessioned2017-05-09T00:33:53Z
date available2017-05-09T00:33:53Z
date copyrightApril, 2009
date issued2009
identifier issn0022-1481
identifier otherJHTRAO-27859#043207_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/141093
description abstractToday’s electronic and optoelectronic devices are plagued by heat transfer issues. As device dimensions shrink and operating frequencies increase, ever-increasing amounts of thermal energy are being generated in smaller and smaller volumes. As devices shrink to length scales on the order of carrier mean free paths, thermal transport is no longer dictated by the thermal properties of the materials comprising the devices, but rather the transport of energy across the interfaces between adjacent materials in the devices. In this paper, current theories and experiments concerning phonon scattering processes driving thermal boundary conductance (hBD) are reviewed. Experimental studies of thermal boundary conductance conducted with the transient thermoreflectance technique challenging specific assumptions about phonon scattering during thermal boundary conductance are presented. To examine the effects of atomic mixing at the interface on hBD, a series of Cr/Si samples was fabricated subject to different deposition conditions. The varying degrees of atomic mixing were measured with Auger electron spectroscopy. Phonon scattering phenomena in the presence of interfacial mixing were observed with the trends in the Cr/Si hBD. The experimental results are reviewed and a virtual crystal diffuse mismatch model is presented to add insight into the effect of interatomic mixing at the interface. The assumption that phonons can only transmit energy across the interface by scattering with a phonon of the same frequency—i.e., elastic scattering, can lead to underpredictions of hBD by almost an order of magnitude. To examine the effects of inelastic scattering on hBD, a series of metal/dielectric interfaces with a wide range of vibrational similarity is studied at temperatures above and around materials’ Debye temperatures. Inelastic scattering is observed and new models are developed to predict hBD and its relative dependency on elastic and inelastic scattering events.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleExamining Interfacial Diffuse Phonon Scattering Through Transient Thermoreflectance Measurements of Thermal Boundary Conductance
typeJournal Paper
journal volume131
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Heat Transfer
identifier doi10.1115/1.3072928
journal fristpage43207
identifier eissn1528-8943
keywordsPhonons
keywordsRadiation scattering
keywordsElectromagnetic scattering
keywordsElectrical conductance
keywordsTemperature
keywordsThermoreflectance
keywordsElastic scattering AND Measurement
treeJournal of Heat Transfer:;2009:;volume( 131 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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