« Peaks and labyrinths in a magnetic fluid | Physics Update home | Quantifying tissue development »

Heat goes ballistic

At the May Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics in San Jose, California, University of Colorado graduate student Mark Siemens reported on studying how tiny parcels of heat, called phonons, spread in a crystal. He and his colleagues used a near-IR laser to heat a grating of nickel lines—each 20 nm high and 1 µm
wide—grown on a sapphire substrate that acted as a heat sink. Then, by recording the transient diffraction of 10-fs pulses of coherent soft x rays from the sample, the researchers could monitor with picometer (10-12 m) precision the displacement of the heated nickel nanostructure. The transport of heat is considered "ballistic" if the characteristic distance over which a phonon moves—about a micron in this case—is smaller than its mean free path before scattering off another phonon. At room temperature a typical phonon's mean free path in sapphire is a mere 150 nm but grows to more than a micron when the sample is cooled below 130 K. At that temperature the data show a clear transition from thermally diffusive to ballistic behavior. One reason for trying to understand how heat moves away from a nanoscale interface, says Siemens, is to manage the thermal environment of future advanced high-speed transistors. — Phillip F. Schewe

Related links:

Nanoscale Probes of Materials

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blogs.physicstoday.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2482

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

COMPANY SPOTLIGHT