Interfacial thermal resistance between carbon nanotubes: Molecular dynamics simulations and analytical thermal modeling
Abstract
Interfacial thermal transport between offset parallel (10,10) single-wall carbon nanotubes is investigated by molecular dynamics simulation and analytical thermal modeling as a function of nanotube spacing, overlap, and length. A four order of magnitude reduction in interfacial thermal resistance is found as the nanotubes are brought into intimate contact. A reduction is also found for longer nanotubes and for nanotubes with increased overlap area. Thermal resistance between a nanotube and a reservoir at its boundary increases with decreasing reservoir temperature. Additionally, length-dependent Young’s moduli and damping coefficients are calculated based on observed nanotube deflections.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review B
- Pub Date:
- September 2006
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevB.74.125403
- Bibcode:
- 2006PhRvB..74l5403Z
- Keywords:
-
- 66.70.+f;
- 05.10.-a;
- 62.25.+g;
- 68.35.Md;
- Nonelectronic thermal conduction and heat-pulse propagation in solids;
- thermal waves;
- Computational methods in statistical physics and nonlinear dynamics;
- Mechanical properties of nanoscale materials;
- Surface thermodynamics surface energies