Crossover behavior of the thermal conductance and Kramers’ transition rate theory

被引:0
|
作者
Kirill A. Velizhanin
Subin Sahu
Chih-Chun Chien
Yonatan Dubi
Michael Zwolak
机构
[1] Los Alamos National Laboratory,Theoretical Division
[2] Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology,Department of Physics
[3] National Institute of Standards and Technology,Department of Chemistry and the Ilse Katz Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology
[4] Maryland Nanocenter,undefined
[5] University of Maryland,undefined
[6] Oregon State University,undefined
[7] School of Natural Sciences,undefined
[8] University of California,undefined
[9] Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Kramers’ theory frames chemical reaction rates in solution as reactants overcoming a barrier in the presence of friction and noise. For weak coupling to the solution, the reaction rate is limited by the rate at which the solution can restore equilibrium after a subset of reactants have surmounted the barrier to become products. For strong coupling, there are always sufficiently energetic reactants. However, the solution returns many of the intermediate states back to the reactants before the product fully forms. Here, we demonstrate that the thermal conductance displays an analogous physical response to the friction and noise that drive the heat current through a material or structure. A crossover behavior emerges where the thermal reservoirs dominate the conductance at the extremes and only in the intermediate region are the intrinsic properties of the lattice manifest. Not only does this shed new light on Kramers’ classic turnover problem, this result is significant for the design of devices for thermal management and other applications, as well as the proper simulation of transport at the nanoscale.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Critical Behavior of the Kramers escape rate in asymmetric classical field theories
    Stein, DL
    JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL PHYSICS, 2004, 114 (5-6) : 1537 - 1556
  • [32] Crossover from regular to chaotic behavior in the conductance of periodic quantum chains
    Cserti, J
    Szalka, G
    Vattay, G
    PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 1998, 57 (24) : 15092 - 15095
  • [33] Theory of thermal conductance in carbon nanotube composites
    Ju, S
    Li, ZY
    PHYSICS LETTERS A, 2006, 353 (2-3) : 194 - 197
  • [34] Generalisation of the Eyring-Kramers Transition Rate Formula to Irreversible Diffusion Processes
    Bouchet, Freddy
    Reygner, Julien
    ANNALES HENRI POINCARE, 2016, 17 (12): : 3499 - 3532
  • [35] Thermal crossover, transition, and coexistence in Fermi polaronic spectroscopies
    Tajima, Hiroyuki
    Uchino, Shun
    PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2019, 99 (06)
  • [36] Dimensional crossover and the freezing transition in density functional theory
    Rosenfeld, Y
    Schmidt, M
    Lowen, H
    Tarazona, P
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER, 1996, 8 (40) : L577 - L581
  • [37] Dimensional crossover of thermal conductance in graphene nanoribbons: a first-principles approach
    Wang, Jian
    Wang, Xiao-Ming
    Chen, Yun-Fei
    Wang, Jian-Sheng
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER, 2012, 24 (29)
  • [38] Crossover from ballistic to diffusive thermal conductance in helically coiled carbon nanotubes
    Popovic, Zoran P.
    Damnjanovic, Milan
    Milosevic, Ivanka
    PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI B-BASIC SOLID STATE PHYSICS, 2014, 251 (12): : 2401 - 2406
  • [39] THE RATE-CONSTANT IN THE KRAMERS MULTIDIMENSIONAL THEORY AND THE SADDLE-POINT AVOIDANCE
    BEREZHKOVSKII, AM
    BEREZHKOVSKII, LM
    ZITZERMAN, VY
    CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1989, 130 (1-3) : 55 - 63
  • [40] Universal Temperature Crossover Behavior of Electrical Conductance in a Single Oligothiophene Molecular Wire
    Lee, See Kei
    Yamada, Ryo
    Tanaka, Shoji
    Chang, Gap Soo
    Asai, Yoshihiro
    Tada, Hirokazu
    ACS NANO, 2012, 6 (06) : 5078 - 5082