2 research outputs found

    Thermal conductivity of carbon nanotubes.

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    Abstract. As the sizes of electronic and mechanical devices are decreased to the micron and nanometre level, it becomes particularly important to predict the thermal transport properties of the components. Using molecular level theories, such predictions are particularly important for modelling nano-electronic devices where scaling laws may change substantially but it is most difficult to accurately measure the properties. Hence, using the empirical bond order dependent force field, we have studied here the thermal conductivity of nanotubes' dependence on structure, defects and vacancies. The anisotropic character of the thermal conductivity of the graphite crystal is naturally reflected in the carbon nanotubes. We found that the carbon nanotubes have very high thermal conductivity comparable to diamond crystal and in-plane graphite sheet. In addition, nanotube bundles show very similar properties as graphite crystal in which dramatic difference in thermal conductivities along different crystal axis

    INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS PUBLISHING MODELLING AND SIMULATION IN MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING First principles force field for metallic tantalum

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    Abstract We develop a many-body force field (FF) for tantalum based on extensive ab initio quantum mechanical (QM) calculations and illustrate its application with molecular dynamics (MD). As input data to the FF we use ab initio methods (LAPW-GGA) to calculate: (i) the zero temperature equation of state (EOS) of Ta for bcc, fcc, and hcp crystal structures for pressures up to ∼500 GPa, and (ii) elastic constants. We use a mixed-basis pseudopotential code to calculate: (iii) volume-relaxed vacancy formation energy also as a function of pressure. In developing the Ta FF we also use previous QM calculations of: (iv) the EOS for the A15 structure; (v) the surface energy bcc (100); (vi) energetics for shear twinning of the bcc crystal. We find that, with appropriate parameters, an embedded atom model FF (denoted as qEAM FF) is able to reproduce all this QM data. We illustrate the use of the qEAM FF with MD to calculate such finite temperature properties as the melting curve up to 300 GPa and thermal expansivity in a wide temperature range. Both our predictions agree well with experimental values
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