2.57 Nano-to-Macro Transport Processes Fall 2004

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2.57 Nano-to-Macro Transport Processes Fall 2004 Lecture 2 5.

1 Heat conduction

Th

Tc

In last lecture, we describe electrons as free electron gas and lattice vibrations as phonon gas. Basically they are both gases in a box. 5.2 Convection 1) Typically electron velocities are 105-106 m/s, while phonon velocities are the sound velocity. G 2) In heat conduction processes, the average velocity of heat carriers is v = 0 . In convection, a non-vanishing average velocity superimposed on their random G velocity, resulting in v 0 . 3) When a liquid or gas molecule is moved from one place to another due to its nonzero velocity, it also carries its internal energy.

5.3 Radiation 1) Wavelength comparison For radio/TV signals, we get 3 108 1 = c/ f = = (m), 6 900 10 3 where we use 900 MHz as the frequency. This wavelength is still much larger than that of the thermal radiation (around 0.5 m). 2) Generation of thermal radiation Thermal radiation typically refers to the electromagnetic waves that are generated by the oscillation charges in the atoms and crystals, while TV and radio signals are generated by artificial current oscillation in a circuit. An electromagnetic wave at frequency can only have energy that is multiple times of h. Emission E2 E= nh E1
2.57 Fall 2004 Lecture 2 1

5.4 Pressure and shear stress

As is shown in the figure, the velocities of gas molecules distribute randomly in all directions. Pressure is caused by their momentum changes normal to the wall. For one molecule, we have G G m(vx>0 vx<0 ) mvx G d (mv ) F = ma = or Fx = . = dt t t Denote n [m-3] as the number of particles per unit volume. We notice nvx [m-2s-1] has the physical meaning as the flux of particles on the wall. Assuming elastic collisions between the wall and molecules, we have vx = 2vx >0 . Thus
1 v2 2 2 nvx>0 (mvx ) = mnvx >0 = mnvx = mn ,
2 3
in which we use average v 2 = vx 2 + v y 2 + vz 2 = 3vx 2 . From here, you can derive the ideal P= gas law using the relationship between velocity and temperature that I will talk below. For assignment 1, similar processes can be followed to calculate the shear stress. y

x 5.5 Charge transport Similarly, we have G G G G G F = q = e ; J = , G G where is electrical field and J is electric current density. An expression of can be derived. . 5.6 Mass diffusion

2.57 Fall 2004 Lecture 2

6. To understand transport and energy conversion, we need to know: How much energy/momentum can a particle have? How many particles have the specified energy E? How fast do they move? How far can they travel? How do they interact with each other? 6.1 How much energy/momentum can a particle have? Energy EKinetic Classical mechanics E = EKinetic+EPotential Quantum mechanics E is the eigenvalue of the Schrdinger equation

mv 2 ETranslation = 2

(for quantum case, I did not give answer but point out it
2

is the solution for particle in a box) mv Kx 2 1 1 K EVibration = + EVibration = h (n + ); = 2 2 2 2 m (n=0,1,2" ) 2 ERotation =hBl (l + 1) (l =0,1" ) I ERotation = 2 Here the Planck constant h = 6.6 1034 J s . The vibration energy of a standing wave inside the potential well is discrete in quantum mechanics. In the table, we give the allowed energy levels of a harmonic oscillator, which is a model for the vibrations of a diatomic molecule such as H2. The dispersion relation (E-k relation) for electrons, phonons, and photons are sketched in following figures, in which the wavevector k points to the direction of wave propagation (electron, photon, and phonon waves).

Energy
Electrons

Energy
Acoustic Phonons

k 0 Wavevector Energy
Photons

k 0 Wavevector 2/

2/

k 0 Wavevector 2/

For photons, the energy is just a linear function of the wavevector, i.e., 2.57 Fall 2004 Lecture 2 3

hc 2 hc G | k |. = 2 2 6.2 How many particles have the specified energy E? For a monoatomic ideal gas system, the only energy of each atom is their kinetic energy, m 2 E= vx + v2 + v2 . y z 2 Statistical thermodynamics gives the probability density f(E), defined as the probability of finding the carriers at energy E per energy interval surrounding E, that a particle in an equilibrium system at a temperature T as, f ( E ) = Ae E/ ( BT ) , E = hc / =

where the Boltzmann constant kB=1.38e-23 J/K. 6.3 How fast do they move? First we use normalization of f to calculate A. Since the probability of finding this particle having energy between 0 and infinity must be one, we have
-

dv dv f(v
x y - -

,v y ,v z )dv z
= 1.

Using spherical coordinates can simplify the calculation as

4 v f(v)dv = 1 .
0

Both of above equations yield m 3/ 2 A=( ) . 2 k BT Thus 3/2 2 m v2 + v2 + vz m


x y ,
exp f (v ) = 2 B T 2 BT which is also called the Maxwell distribution. The average energy of the monoatomic gas is 3/2 m v2 + v2 + v2 m 2 m x y z 2 2 dv z

E = dv x dv y vx + v y + vz exp 2 2 BT 2 BT - - - 3 = k BT 2 At room temperature (300 K), this average energy is 39 meV, or 6.21e-21 J. For He gas, mv 2 3 m=6.4e-27 kg. Using = k BT , we can calculate average v=1000 m/s, while it 2 2 becomes 500 m/s for air. It is good to remember that kBT at room temperature is 26 meV.

Note: The flux of quantity X (e.g. momentum, energy) is expressed as n( X ) X v , which is already used in 5.4.

2.57 Fall 2004 Lecture 2

6.4 How far can they travel? The effective diameter for two atoms to collide is 2D. . If the number concentration is n [m-3], then the number of molecules that this particle will collide with is nD2L. The average distance L between each collision satisfies n D 2 L = 1.

2d

L
Thus the mean free path is 1 . = n D 2 Noticing n = / m , where m is molecular weight, is density. For ideal gases, we have P = RT . Therefore, RuT kT m mRT = = = = B2 ,
2 2 2 D D P D PN A D P where the universal gas constant R u = N A k B = 8.314 J / mol
K . The ideal gas law can also be derived as following: v2 mv 2 3 In section 5.4, we derive P = mn . In section 6.3, we get = k BT . Thus 3 2 2 2 v N N NA N Ru P = mn = nk BT = k BT = k BT = T , or PV = NRuT , in which N is 3 V NA V NA V the mole number. At room temperature, atmosphere pressure, the mean free path is
k BT 1.38e-23 300
= = = 0.14 m , 2 2D P 2 (2.5e-10) 2 1.01e5 in which 2 comes when we consider relative velocity instead of assuming other particles are stationary. The collision time (relaxation time) is = / v ~ 1010 s . For P=1 mTorr, we have = 0.1m . The molecules seldom collide with each other. Note: This relaxation time is not very small for current technology. For short-pulse lasers, the shortest period is only a few fs. 6.5 How do they interact with each other? The collisions between particles can be elastic or inelastic. In a solar cell, the photon excites electrons to generate an output voltage. Energy conversion is closely associated with transport.

2.57 Fall 2004 Lecture 2

7. Simple kinetic theory In the figure, half of the carriers within vx can go across the interface before being scattered. Here vx is the x component of the random velocity of the heat carriers and is the relaxation time the average time a heat carrier travels before it is scattered and changes its direction. So the net heat flux carried by heat carriers across the interface is 1 1 q x = (nEv x ) x v x (nEv x ) x + v x . 2 2

Hot

qx

Cold x

vx x
Using a Taylor expansion, we can write the above relation as d (nEvx ) qx = -vx dx
d (nE )
= -vx 2 dx
du dT
= -vx 2 . dT dx Notice specific heat C = du / dT , vx 2 = v 2 / 3 . The above equation changes into

qx = -

v2 dT C . 3 dx

Compared with the Fouriers law, we know that thermal conductivity k = capital C is specific heat per unit volume, C=c.

Cv 2
3

. The

2.57 Fall 2004 Lecture 2

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