Thermal conductance quantum

In physics, the thermal conductance quantum describes the rate at which heat is transported through a single ballistic phonon channel of temperature . It is given by:

.

The thermal conductance of any electrically insulating structure that exhibits ballistic phonon transport is a positive integer multiple of The thermal conductance quantum was first measured in 2000.[1] These measurements employed suspended silicon nitride nanostructures that exhibited a constant thermal conductance of 16 at temperatures below approximately 0.6 kelvin.

For ballistic electrical conductors, the electron contribution to the thermal conductance is also quantized as a result of the electrical conductance quantum and the Wiedemann–Franz law, which has been quantitatively measured at both cryogenic (~20 mK) [2] and room temperature (~300K).[3][4]

The thermal conductance quantum, also called quantized thermal conductance, may be understood from the Wiedemann-Franz law, which shows that

where is a universal constant called the Lorenz factor,

In the regime with quantized electric conductance, one may have

where is an integer, also known as TKNN number. Then

where is the thermal conductance quantum defined above.

References

  1. Schwab, K.; E. A. Henriksen; J. M. Worlock; M. L. Roukes (2000). "Measurement of the quantum of thermal conductance". Nature. 404 (6781): 974–7. Bibcode:2000Natur.404..974S. doi:10.1038/35010065. PMID 10801121.
  2. Jezouin, S.; et al. (2013). "Quantum Limit of Heat Flow Across a Single Electronic Channel". Science. 342 (6158): 601–604. arXiv:1502.07856. Bibcode:2013Sci...342..601J. doi:10.1126/science.1241912. PMID 24091707.
  3. Cui, L.; et al. (2017). "Quantized thermal transport in single-atom junctions" (PDF). Science. 355 (6330): 1192–1195. Bibcode:2017Sci...355.1192C. doi:10.1126/science.aam6622. PMID 28209640.
  4. Mosso, N.; et al. (2017). "Heat transport through atomic contacts". Nature Nanotechnology. 12 (5): 430–433. arXiv:1612.04699. doi:10.1038/nnano.2016.302. PMID 28166205.

See also

  • Thermal properties of nanostructures
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