Thermal conductance quantum
In physics, the thermal conductance quantum describes the rate at which heat is transported through a single ballistic phonon channel. It is given by:
.
The thermal conductance of any electrically insulating structure that exhibits ballistic phonon transport is a positive integer multiple of . The thermal conductance quantum was first measured in 2000.[1] These measurements employed suspended silicon nitride nanostructures that exhibited a constant thermal conductance of 16 at temperatures below approximately 0.6 kelvin.
For ballistic electrical conductors, the electron contribution to the thermal conductance is also quantized as a result of the electrical conductance quantum and the Wiedemann–Franz law.
References
- ↑ Schwab, K.; E. A. Henriksen; J. M. Worlock; M. L. Roukes (2000). "Measurement of the quantum of thermal conductance". Nature. 404 (6781): 974–7. PMID 10801121. doi:10.1038/35010065.
See also
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