Abstract
The Interfacial Thermal Conductance (ITC) is a fundamental property of materials and has particular relevance at the nanoscale. The ITC quantifies the thermal resistance between materials of different compositions or between fluids in contact with materials. Furthermore, the ITC determines the rate of cooling/heating of the materials and the temperature drop across the interface. Here we propose a method to compute local ITCs and temperature drops of nanoparticle-fluid interfaces. Our approach resolves the ITC at the atomic level using the atomic coordinates of the nanomaterial as nodes to compute local thermal transport properties. We obtain high-resolution descriptions of the interfacial thermal transport by combining the atomistic nodal approach, computational geometry techniques and "computational farming'' using Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics simulations. We illustrate our method by analyzing various nanoparticles as a function of their size and geometry, targeting experimentally relevant structures like capped octagonal rods, cuboctahedrons, decahedrons, rhombic dodecahedrons, cubes, icosahedrons, truncated octahedrons, octahedrons and spheres. We show that the ITC of these very different geometries can be accurately described in terms of the local coordination number of the atoms in the nanoparticle surface. Nanoparticle geometries with lower surface coordination numbers feature higher ITCs, and the ITC generally increases with decreasing particle size.
Supplementary materials
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Description
Contains: computer simulation details, details on nanoparticle structures and sizes, heat transport equations, details on the numerical calculation of thermal gradients, conductance profiles for various nanoparticles, radial distribution functions nanoparticle-fluid, details on the alpha-shape method, solvent density profiles and size dependence of average coordination numbers for various nanoparticle structures
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