Radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devices

In a previous publication [I. J. Maasilta, AIP Advances 1, 041704 (2011)], we discussed the formalism and some computational results for phononic thermal conduction in the suspended membrane geometry for radial heat flow from a central source, which is a common geometry for some low-tem...

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Main Authors: T. A. Puurtinen, I. J. Maasilta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2014-12-01
Series:AIP Advances
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4904362
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spelling doaj-8e45d2de255d4973b48176a2f76088092020-11-24T22:09:51ZengAIP Publishing LLCAIP Advances2158-32262014-12-01412124503124503-810.1063/1.4904362017497ADVRadial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devicesT. A. Puurtinen0I. J. Maasilta1Nanoscience Center, Department of Physics, University of Jyväskylä, P. O. Box 35, FIN-40014 Jyväskylä, FinlandNanoscience Center, Department of Physics, University of Jyväskylä, P. O. Box 35, FIN-40014 Jyväskylä, Finland In a previous publication [I. J. Maasilta, AIP Advances 1, 041704 (2011)], we discussed the formalism and some computational results for phononic thermal conduction in the suspended membrane geometry for radial heat flow from a central source, which is a common geometry for some low-temperature detectors, for example. We studied the case where only diffusive surface scattering is present, the so called Casimir limit, which can be experimentally relevant at temperatures below ∼ 10 K in typical materials, and even higher for ultrathin samples. Here, we extend our studies to much thinner membranes, obtaining numerical results for geometries which are more typical in experiments. In addition, we interpret the results in terms of the small signal and differential thermal conductance, so that guidelines for designing devices, such as low-temperature bolometric detectors, are more easily obtained. Scaling with membrane dimensions is shown to differ significantly from the bulk scattering, and, in particular, thinning the membrane is shown to lead to a much stronger reduction in thermal conductance than what one would envision from the simplest bulk formulas. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4904362
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author T. A. Puurtinen
I. J. Maasilta
spellingShingle T. A. Puurtinen
I. J. Maasilta
Radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devices
AIP Advances
author_facet T. A. Puurtinen
I. J. Maasilta
author_sort T. A. Puurtinen
title Radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devices
title_short Radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devices
title_full Radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devices
title_fullStr Radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devices
title_full_unstemmed Radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the Casimir limit: Design guidelines for devices
title_sort radial phononic thermal conductance in thin membranes in the casimir limit: design guidelines for devices
publisher AIP Publishing LLC
series AIP Advances
issn 2158-3226
publishDate 2014-12-01
description In a previous publication [I. J. Maasilta, AIP Advances 1, 041704 (2011)], we discussed the formalism and some computational results for phononic thermal conduction in the suspended membrane geometry for radial heat flow from a central source, which is a common geometry for some low-temperature detectors, for example. We studied the case where only diffusive surface scattering is present, the so called Casimir limit, which can be experimentally relevant at temperatures below ∼ 10 K in typical materials, and even higher for ultrathin samples. Here, we extend our studies to much thinner membranes, obtaining numerical results for geometries which are more typical in experiments. In addition, we interpret the results in terms of the small signal and differential thermal conductance, so that guidelines for designing devices, such as low-temperature bolometric detectors, are more easily obtained. Scaling with membrane dimensions is shown to differ significantly from the bulk scattering, and, in particular, thinning the membrane is shown to lead to a much stronger reduction in thermal conductance than what one would envision from the simplest bulk formulas.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4904362
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