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Heat goes ballistic

JUL 01, 2008

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.

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This Content Appeared In
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Volume 61, Number 7

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