English

Phonon Localization in Heat Conduction

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2016-02-17 v1 Materials Science

Abstract

Departures in phonon heat conduction from diffusion have been extensively observed in nanostructures through their thermal conductivity reduction and largely explained with classical size effects neglecting phonon's wave nature. Here, we report localization-behavior in phonon heat conduction due to multiple scattering and interference of phonon waves, observed through measurements of the thermal conductivities of GaAs/AlAs superlattices with ErAs nanodots randomly distributed at the interfaces. Near room temperature, the measured thermal conductivities increased with increasing number of SL periods and eventually saturated, indicating a transition from ballistic-to-diffusive transport. At low temperatures, the thermal conductivities of the samples with ErAs dots first increased and then decreased with an increasing number of periods, signaling phonon wave localization. This Anderson localization behavior is also validated via atomistic Green's function simulations. The observation of phonon localization in heat conduction is surprising due to the broadband nature of thermal transport. This discovery suggests a new path forward for engineering phonon thermal transport.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1602.05057,
  title  = {Phonon Localization in Heat Conduction},
  author = {Maria N. Luckyanova and Jonathan Mendoza and Hong Lu and Shengxi Huang and Jiawei Zhou and Mingda Li and Brian J. Kirby and Alexander J. Grutter and Alexander A. Puretzky and Millie S. Dresselhaus and Arthur Gossard and Gang Chen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1602.05057},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

28 pages, 3 figures, 10 supplementary figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T12:51:22.970Z