Spectral Control of Thermal Boundary Conductance between Copper and Carbon Crystals by Self-Assembled Monolayers

Shih-Wei Hung, Shiqian Hu, Junichiro Shiomi*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

31 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Controlling the thermal boundary conductance (TBC) between copper and carbon crystals is important since it can bottleneck the thermal conductivity when reinforcing copper with carbon-crystals fillers, namely diamond or graphite, to develop heat sinks and spreaders needed for the thermal management. In this work, by using the nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulation, we show how the TBC of copper/diamond is smaller than that of copper/graphite by an order of magnitude due to poorer overlap of the lattice vibrational spectra. To improve the TBC at the copper/ diamond interface, the covalently bonded self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) with different chain lengths are installed at the interface. The TBC is significantly improved and increases with the chain length to approach the value of the copper/ graphite interface. The spectral analysis further identifies that this is because the length due to disordering of the collective SAMs structure, enhancing the spectral transmission in low-frequency vibrational modes with copper. The obtained results are useful to improve the thermal conductivity of metal/carbon-crystal composite materials.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2594-2601
JournalACS Applied Electronic Materials
Volume1
Issue number12
Online published18 Nov 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Dec 2019

Research Keywords

  • thermal boundary conductance
  • metal matrix composite
  • molecular dynamics simulation
  • self-assembled monolayer
  • chain-length dependence
  • vibrational spectral analysis
  • frequency-dependent transmissivity
  • CONDUCTIVITY
  • COMPOSITES
  • DYNAMICS
  • METALS

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