Ultrafast and Nanoscale Energy Transduction Mechanisms and Coupled Thermal Transport across Interfaces

ACS Nano. 2023 Aug 8;17(15):14253-14282. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.3c02417. Epub 2023 Jul 17.

Abstract

The coupled interactions among the fundamental carriers of charge, heat, and electromagnetic fields at interfaces and boundaries give rise to energetic processes that enable a wide array of technologies. The energy transduction among these coupled carriers results in thermal dissipation at these surfaces, often quantified by the thermal boundary resistance, thus driving the functionalities of the modern nanotechnologies that are continuing to provide transformational benefits in computing, communication, health care, clean energy, power recycling, sensing, and manufacturing, to name a few. It is the purpose of this Review to summarize recent works that have been reported on ultrafast and nanoscale energy transduction and heat transfer mechanisms across interfaces when different thermal carriers couple near or across interfaces. We review coupled heat transfer mechanisms at interfaces of solids, liquids, gasses, and plasmas that drive the resulting interfacial heat transfer and temperature gradients due to energy and momentum coupling among various combinations of electrons, vibrons, photons, polaritons (plasmon polaritons and phonon polaritons), and molecules. These interfacial thermal transport processes with coupled energy carriers involve relatively recent research, and thus, several opportunities exist to further develop these nascent fields, which we comment on throughout the course of this Review.

Keywords: ab initio electron−vibrational dynamics at interfaces; ballistic thermal injection; coupled local equilibrium; electron−phonon coupling; energy transduction; interfacial heat transfer; plasmas; plasmon polaritons; solid−gas interactions.

Publication types

  • Review