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Thermal conductivity and resistivity

The thermal conductivity of a material is a measure of its ability to conduct heat. It is commonly denoted by , , or and is measured in W·m−1·K−1.

Thermal conductivity
Common symbols
κ
SI unitwatt per meter-kelvin (W/(m⋅K))
In SI base unitskg⋅m⋅s−3⋅K-1
Dimension
Thermal resistivity
Common symbols
ρ
SI unitkelvin-meter per watt (K⋅m/W)
In SI base unitskg-1⋅m-1⋅s3⋅K
Dimension

Heat transfer occurs at a lower rate in materials of low thermal conductivity than in materials of high thermal conductivity. For instance, metals typically have high thermal conductivity and are very efficient at conducting heat, while the opposite is true for insulating materials like mineral wool or Styrofoam. Correspondingly, materials of high thermal conductivity are widely used in heat sink applications, and materials of low thermal conductivity are used as thermal insulation. The reciprocal of thermal conductivity is called thermal resistivity.

The defining equation for thermal conductivity is , where is the heat flux, is the thermal conductivity, and is the temperature gradient. This is known as Fourier's Law for heat conduction. Although commonly expressed as a scalar, the most general form of thermal conductivity is a second-rank tensor. However, the tensorial description only becomes necessary in materials which are anisotropic.

Definition edit

Simple definition edit

 
Thermal conductivity can be defined in terms of the heat flow   across a temperature difference.

Consider a solid material placed between two environments of different temperatures. Let   be the temperature at   and   be the temperature at  , and suppose  . An example of this scenario is a building on a cold winter day: the solid material in this case is the building wall, separating the cold outdoor environment from the warm indoor environment.

According to the second law of thermodynamics, heat will flow from the hot environment to the cold one as the temperature difference is equalized by diffusion. This is quantified in terms of a heat flux  , which gives the rate, per unit area, at which heat flows in a given direction (in this case minus x-direction). In many materials,   is observed to be directly proportional to the temperature difference and inversely proportional to the separation distance  :[1]

 

The constant of proportionality   is the thermal conductivity; it is a physical property of the material. In the present scenario, since   heat flows in the minus x-direction and   is negative, which in turn means that  . In general,   is always defined to be positive. The same definition of   can also be extended to gases and liquids, provided other modes of energy transport, such as convection and radiation, are eliminated or accounted for.

The preceding derivation assumes that the   does not change significantly as temperature is varied from   to  . Cases in which the temperature variation of   is non-negligible must be addressed using the more general definition of   discussed below.

General definition edit

Thermal conduction is defined as the transport of energy due to random molecular motion across a temperature gradient. It is distinguished from energy transport by convection and molecular work in that it does not involve macroscopic flows or work-performing internal stresses.

Energy flow due to thermal conduction is classified as heat and is quantified by the vector  , which gives the heat flux at position   and time  . According to the second law of thermodynamics, heat flows from high to low temperature. Hence, it is reasonable to postulate that   is proportional to the gradient of the temperature field  , i.e.

 

where the constant of proportionality,  , is the thermal conductivity. This is called Fourier's law of heat conduction. Despite its name, it is not a law but a definition of thermal conductivity in terms of the independent physical quantities   and  .[2][3] As such, its usefulness depends on the ability to determine   for a given material under given conditions. The constant   itself usually depends on   and thereby implicitly on space and time. An explicit space and time dependence could also occur if the material is inhomogeneous or changing with time.[4]

In some solids, thermal conduction is anisotropic, i.e. the heat flux is not always parallel to the temperature gradient. To account for such behavior, a tensorial form of Fourier's law must be used:

 

where   is symmetric, second-rank tensor called the thermal conductivity tensor.[5]

An implicit assumption in the above description is the presence of local thermodynamic equilibrium, which allows one to define a temperature field  . This assumption could be violated in systems that are unable to attain local equilibrium, as might happen in the presence of strong nonequilibrium driving or long-ranged interactions.

Other quantities edit

In engineering practice, it is common to work in terms of quantities which are derivative to thermal conductivity and implicitly take into account design-specific features such as component dimensions.

For instance, thermal conductance is defined as the quantity of heat that passes in unit time through a plate of particular area and thickness when its opposite faces differ in temperature by one kelvin. For a plate of thermal conductivity  , area   and thickness  , the conductance is  , measured in W⋅K−1.[6] The relationship between thermal conductivity and conductance is analogous to the relationship between electrical conductivity and electrical conductance.

Thermal resistance is the inverse of thermal conductance.[6] It is a convenient measure to use in multicomponent design since thermal resistances are additive when occurring in series.[7]

There is also a measure known as the heat transfer coefficient: the quantity of heat that passes per unit time through a unit area of a plate of particular thickness when its opposite faces differ in temperature by one kelvin.[8] In ASTM C168-15, this area-independent quantity is referred to as the "thermal conductance".[9] The reciprocal of the heat transfer coefficient is thermal insolance. In summary, for a plate of thermal conductivity  , area   and thickness  ,

  • thermal conductance =  , measured in W⋅K−1.
    • thermal resistance =  , measured in K⋅W−1.
  • heat transfer coefficient =  , measured in W⋅K−1⋅m−2.
    • thermal insulance =  , measured in K⋅m2⋅W−1.

The heat transfer coefficient is also known as thermal admittance in the sense that the material may be seen as admitting heat to flow.[10]

An additional term, thermal transmittance, quantifies the thermal conductance of a structure along with heat transfer due to convection and radiation.[citation needed] It is measured in the same units as thermal conductance and is sometimes known as the composite thermal conductance. The term U-value is also used.

Finally, thermal diffusivity   combines thermal conductivity with density and specific heat:[11]

 .

As such, it quantifies the thermal inertia of a material, i.e. the relative difficulty in heating a material to a given temperature using heat sources applied at the boundary.[12]

Units edit

In the International System of Units (SI), thermal conductivity is measured in watts per meter-kelvin (W/(mK)). Some papers report in watts per centimeter-kelvin (W/(cm⋅K)).

In imperial units, thermal conductivity is measured in BTU/(hft°F).[note 1][13]

The dimension of thermal conductivity is M1L1T−3Θ−1, expressed in terms of the dimensions mass (M), length (L), time (T), and temperature (Θ).

Other units which are closely related to the thermal conductivity are in common use in the construction and textile industries. The construction industry makes use of measures such as the R-value (resistance) and the U-value (transmittance or conductance). Although related to the thermal conductivity of a material used in an insulation product or assembly, R- and U-values are measured per unit area, and depend on the specified thickness of the product or assembly.[note 2]

Likewise the textile industry has several units including the tog and the clo which express thermal resistance of a material in a way analogous to the R-values used in the construction industry.

Measurement edit

There are several ways to measure thermal conductivity; each is suitable for a limited range of materials. Broadly speaking, there are two categories of measurement techniques: steady-state and transient. Steady-state techniques infer the thermal conductivity from measurements on the state of a material once a steady-state temperature profile has been reached, whereas transient techniques operate on the instantaneous state of a system during the approach to steady state. Lacking an explicit time component, steady-state techniques do not require complicated signal analysis (steady state implies constant signals). The disadvantage is that a well-engineered experimental setup is usually needed, and the time required to reach steady state precludes rapid measurement.

In comparison with solid materials, the thermal properties of fluids are more difficult to study experimentally. This is because in addition to thermal conduction, convective and radiative energy transport are usually present unless measures are taken to limit these processes. The formation of an insulating boundary layer can also result in an apparent reduction in the thermal conductivity.[14][15]

Experimental values edit

 
Experimental values of thermal conductivity[clarification needed]

The thermal conductivities of common substances span at least four orders of magnitude.[16] Gases generally have low thermal conductivity, and pure metals have high thermal conductivity. For example, under standard conditions the thermal conductivity of copper is over 10000 times that of air.

Of all materials, allotropes of carbon, such as graphite and diamond, are usually credited with having the highest thermal conductivities at room temperature.[17] The thermal conductivity of natural diamond at room temperature is several times higher than that of a highly conductive metal such as copper (although the precise value varies depending on the diamond type).[18]

Thermal conductivities of selected substances are tabulated below; an expanded list can be found in the list of thermal conductivities. These values are illustrative estimates only, as they do not account for measurement uncertainties or variability in material definitions.

Substance Thermal conductivity (W·m−1·K−1) Temperature (°C)
Air[19] 0.026 25
Styrofoam[20] 0.033 25
Water[21] 0.6089 26.85
Concrete[21] 0.92
Copper[21] 384.1 18.05
Natural diamond[18] 895–1350 26.85

Influencing factors edit

Temperature edit

The effect of temperature on thermal conductivity is different for metals and nonmetals. In metals, heat conductivity is primarily due to free electrons. Following the Wiedemann–Franz law, thermal conductivity of metals is approximately proportional to the absolute temperature (in kelvins) times electrical conductivity. In pure metals the electrical conductivity decreases with increasing temperature and thus the product of the two, the thermal conductivity, stays approximately constant. However, as temperatures approach absolute zero, the thermal conductivity decreases sharply.[22] In alloys the change in electrical conductivity is usually smaller and thus thermal conductivity increases with temperature, often proportionally to temperature. Many pure metals have a peak thermal conductivity between 2 K and 10 K.

On the other hand, heat conductivity in nonmetals is mainly due to lattice vibrations (phonons). Except for high-quality crystals at low temperatures, the phonon mean free path is not reduced significantly at higher temperatures. Thus, the thermal conductivity of nonmetals is approximately constant at high temperatures. At low temperatures well below the Debye temperature, thermal conductivity decreases, as does the heat capacity, due to carrier scattering from defects.[22]

Chemical phase edit

When a material undergoes a phase change (e.g. from solid to liquid), the thermal conductivity may change abruptly. For instance, when ice melts to form liquid water at 0 °C, the thermal conductivity changes from 2.18 W/(m⋅K) to 0.56 W/(m⋅K).[23]

Even more dramatically, the thermal conductivity of a fluid diverges in the vicinity of the vapor-liquid critical point.[24]

Thermal anisotropy edit

Some substances, such as non-cubic crystals, can exhibit different thermal conductivities along different crystal axes. Sapphire is a notable example of variable thermal conductivity based on orientation and temperature, with 35 W/(m⋅K) along the c axis and 32 W/(m⋅K) along the a axis.[25]Wood generally conducts better along the grain than across it. Other examples of materials where the thermal conductivity varies with direction are metals that have undergone heavy cold pressing, laminated materials, cables, the materials used for the Space Shuttle thermal protection system, and fiber-reinforced composite structures.[26]

When anisotropy is present, the direction of heat flow may differ from the direction of the thermal gradient.

Electrical conductivity edit

In metals, thermal conductivity is approximately correlated with electrical conductivity according to the Wiedemann–Franz law, as freely moving valence electrons transfer not only electric current but also heat energy. However, the general correlation between electrical and thermal conductance does not hold for other materials, due to the increased importance of phonon carriers for heat in non-metals. Highly electrically conductive silver is less thermally conductive than diamond, which is an electrical insulator but conducts heat via phonons due to its orderly array of atoms.

Magnetic field edit

The influence of magnetic fields on thermal conductivity is known as the thermal Hall effect or Righi–Leduc effect.

Gaseous phases edit

 
Exhaust system components with ceramic coatings having a low thermal conductivity reduce heating of nearby sensitive components

In the absence of convection, air and other gases are good insulators. Therefore, many insulating materials function simply by having a large number of gas-filled pockets which obstruct heat conduction pathways. Examples of these include expanded and extruded polystyrene (popularly referred to as "styrofoam") and silica aerogel, as well as warm clothes. Natural, biological insulators such as fur and feathers achieve similar effects by trapping air in pores, pockets, or voids.

Low density gases, such as hydrogen and helium typically have high thermal conductivity. Dense gases such as xenon and dichlorodifluoromethane have low thermal conductivity. An exception, sulfur hexafluoride, a dense gas, has a relatively high thermal conductivity due to its high heat capacity. Argon and krypton, gases denser than air, are often used in insulated glazing (double paned windows) to improve their insulation characteristics.

The thermal conductivity through bulk materials in porous or granular form is governed by the type of gas in the gaseous phase, and its pressure.[27] At low pressures, the thermal conductivity of a gaseous phase is reduced, with this behaviour governed by the Knudsen number, defined as  , where   is the mean free path of gas molecules and   is the typical gap size of the space filled by the gas. In a granular material   corresponds to the characteristic size of the gaseous phase in the pores or intergranular spaces.[27]

Isotopic purity edit

The thermal conductivity of a crystal can depend strongly on isotopic purity, assuming other lattice defects are negligible. A notable example is diamond: at a temperature of around 100 K the thermal conductivity increases from 10,000 W·m−1·K−1 for natural type IIa diamond (98.9% 12C), to 41,000 for 99.9% enriched synthetic diamond. A value of 200,000 is predicted for 99.999% 12C at 80 K, assuming an otherwise pure crystal.[28] The thermal conductivity of 99% isotopically enriched cubic boron nitride is ~ 1400 W·m−1·K−1,[29] which is 90% higher than that of natural boron nitride.

Molecular origins edit

The molecular mechanisms of thermal conduction vary among different materials, and in general depend on details of the microscopic structure and molecular interactions. As such, thermal conductivity is difficult to predict from first-principles. Any expressions for thermal conductivity which are exact and general, e.g. the Green-Kubo relations, are difficult to apply in practice, typically consisting of averages over multiparticle correlation functions.[30] A notable exception is a monatomic dilute gas, for which a well-developed theory exists expressing thermal conductivity accurately and explicitly in terms of molecular parameters.

In a gas, thermal conduction is mediated by discrete molecular collisions. In a simplified picture of a solid, thermal conduction occurs by two mechanisms: 1) the migration of free electrons and 2) lattice vibrations (phonons). The first mechanism dominates in pure metals and the second in non-metallic solids. In liquids, by contrast, the precise microscopic mechanisms of thermal conduction are poorly understood.[31]

Gases edit

In a simplified model of a dilute monatomic gas, molecules are modeled as rigid spheres which are in constant motion, colliding elastically with each other and with the walls of their container. Consider such a gas at temperature   and with density  , specific heat   and molecular mass  . Under these assumptions, an elementary calculation yields for the thermal conductivity

 

where   is a numerical constant of order  ,   is the Boltzmann constant, and   is the mean free path, which measures the average distance a molecule travels between collisions.[32] Since   is inversely proportional to density, this equation predicts that thermal conductivity is independent of density for fixed temperature. The explanation is that increasing density increases the number of molecules which carry energy but decreases the average distance   a molecule can travel before transferring its energy to a different molecule: these two effects cancel out. For most gases, this prediction agrees well with experiments at pressures up to about 10 atmospheres.[33] On the other hand, experiments show a more rapid increase with temperature than   (here,   is independent of  ). This failure of the elementary theory can be traced to the oversimplified "elastic sphere" model, and in particular to the fact that the interparticle attractions, present in all real-world gases, are ignored.

To incorporate more complex interparticle interactions, a systematic approach is necessary. One such approach is provided by Chapman–Enskog theory, which derives explicit expressions for thermal conductivity starting from the Boltzmann equation. The Boltzmann equation, in turn, provides a statistical description of a dilute gas for generic interparticle interactions. For a monatomic gas, expressions for   derived in this way take the form

 

where   is an effective particle diameter and   is a function of temperature whose explicit form depends on the interparticle interaction law.[34][33] For rigid elastic spheres,   is independent of   and very close to  . More complex interaction laws introduce a weak temperature dependence. The precise nature of the dependence is not always easy to discern, however, as   is defined as a multi-dimensional integral which may not be expressible in terms of elementary functions. An alternate, equivalent way to present the result is in terms of the gas viscosity  , which can also be calculated in the Chapman–Enskog approach:

 

where   is a numerical factor which in general depends on the molecular model. For smooth spherically symmetric molecules, however,   is very close to  , not deviating by more than   for a variety of interparticle force laws.[35] Since  ,  , and   are each well-defined physical quantities which can be measured independent of each other, this expression provides a convenient test of the theory. For monatomic gases, such as the noble gases, the agreement with experiment is fairly good.[36]

For gases whose molecules are not spherically symmetric, the expression   still holds. In contrast with spherically symmetric molecules, however,   varies significantly depending on the particular form of the interparticle interactions: this is a result of the energy exchanges between the internal and translational degrees of freedom of the molecules. An explicit treatment of this effect is difficult in the Chapman–Enskog approach. Alternately, the approximate expression   was suggested by Eucken, where   is the heat capacity ratio of the gas.[35][37]

The entirety of this section assumes the mean free path   is small compared with macroscopic (system) dimensions. In extremely dilute gases this assumption fails, and thermal conduction is described instead by an apparent thermal conductivity which decreases with density. Ultimately, as the density goes to   the system approaches a vacuum, and thermal conduction ceases entirely.

Liquids edit

The exact mechanisms of thermal conduction are poorly understood in liquids: there is no molecular picture which is both simple and accurate. An example of a simple but very rough theory is that of Bridgman, in which a liquid is ascribed a local molecular structure similar to that of a solid, i.e. with molecules located approximately on a lattice. Elementary calculations then lead to the expression

 

where   is the Avogadro constant,   is the volume of a mole of liquid, and   is the speed of sound in the liquid. This is commonly called Bridgman's equation.[38]

Metals edit

For metals at low temperatures the heat is carried mainly by the free electrons. In this case the mean velocity is the Fermi velocity which is temperature independent. The mean free path is determined by the impurities and the crystal imperfections which are temperature independent as well. So the only temperature-dependent quantity is the heat capacity c, which, in this case, is proportional to T. So

 

with k0 a constant. For pure metals, k0 is large, so the thermal conductivity is high. At higher temperatures the mean free path is limited by the phonons, so the thermal conductivity tends to decrease with temperature. In alloys the density of the impurities is very high, so l and, consequently k, are small. Therefore, alloys, such as stainless steel, can be used for thermal insulation.

Lattice waves, phonons, in dielectric solids edit

Heat transport in both amorphous and crystalline dielectric solids is by way of elastic vibrations of the lattice (i.e., phonons). This transport mechanism is theorized to be limited by the elastic scattering of acoustic phonons at lattice defects. This has been confirmed by the experiments of Chang and Jones on commercial glasses and glass ceramics, where the mean free paths were found to be limited by "internal boundary scattering" to length scales of 10−2 cm to 10−3 cm.[39][40]

The phonon mean free path has been associated directly with the effective relaxation length for processes without directional correlation. If Vg is the group velocity of a phonon wave packet, then the relaxation length   is defined as:

 

where t is the characteristic relaxation time. Since longitudinal waves have a much greater phase velocity than transverse waves,[41] Vlong is much greater than Vtrans, and the relaxation length or mean free path of longitudinal phonons will be much greater. Thus, thermal conductivity will be largely determined by the speed of longitudinal phonons.[39][42]

Regarding the dependence of wave velocity on wavelength or frequency (dispersion), low-frequency phonons of long wavelength will be limited in relaxation length by elastic Rayleigh scattering. This type of light scattering from small particles is proportional to the fourth power of the frequency. For higher frequencies, the power of the frequency will decrease until at highest frequencies scattering is almost frequency independent. Similar arguments were subsequently generalized to many glass forming substances using Brillouin scattering.[43][44][45][46]

Phonons in the acoustical branch dominate the phonon heat conduction as they have greater energy dispersion and therefore a greater distribution of phonon velocities. Additional optical modes could also be caused by the presence of internal structure (i.e., charge or mass) at a lattice point; it is implied that the group velocity of these modes is low and therefore their contribution to the lattice thermal conductivity λL ( L) is small.[47]

Each phonon mode can be split into one longitudinal and two transverse polarization branches. By extrapolating the phenomenology of lattice points to the unit cells it is seen that the total number of degrees of freedom is 3pq when p is the number of primitive cells with q atoms/unit cell. From these only 3p are associated with the acoustic modes, the remaining 3p(q − 1) are accommodated through the optical branches. This implies that structures with larger p and q contain a greater number of optical modes and a reduced λL.

From these ideas, it can be concluded that increasing crystal complexity, which is described by a complexity factor CF (defined as the number of atoms/primitive unit cell), decreases λL.[48][failed verification] This was done by assuming that the relaxation time τ decreases with increasing number of atoms in the unit cell and then scaling the parameters of the expression for thermal conductivity in high temperatures accordingly.[47]

Describing anharmonic effects is complicated because an exact treatment as in the harmonic case is not possible, and phonons are no longer exact eigensolutions to the equations of motion. Even if the state of motion of the crystal could be described with a plane wave at a particular time, its accuracy would deteriorate progressively with time. Time development would have to be described by introducing a spectrum of other phonons, which is known as the phonon decay. The two most important anharmonic effects are the thermal expansion and the phonon thermal conductivity.

Only when the phonon number ‹n› deviates from the equilibrium value ‹n›0, can a thermal current arise as stated in the following expression

 

where v is the energy transport velocity of phonons. Only two mechanisms exist that can cause time variation of ‹n› in a particular region. The number of phonons that diffuse into the region from neighboring regions differs from those that diffuse out, or phonons decay inside the same region into other phonons. A special form of the Boltzmann equation

 

states this. When steady state conditions are assumed the total time derivate of phonon number is zero, because the temperature is constant in time and therefore the phonon number stays also constant. Time variation due to phonon decay is described with a relaxation time (τ) approximation

 

which states that the more the phonon number deviates from its equilibrium value, the more its time variation increases. At steady state conditions and local thermal equilibrium are assumed we get the following equation

 

Using the relaxation time approximation for the Boltzmann equation and assuming steady-state conditions, the phonon thermal conductivity λL can be determined. The temperature dependence for λL originates from the variety of processes, whose significance for λL depends on the temperature range of interest. Mean free path is one factor that determines the temperature dependence for λL, as stated in the following equation

 

where Λ is the mean free path for phonon and   denotes the heat capacity. This equation is a result of combining the four previous equations with each other and knowing that   for cubic or isotropic systems and  .[49]

At low temperatures (< 10 K) the anharmonic interaction does not influence the mean free path and therefore, the thermal resistivity is determined only from processes for which q-conservation does not hold. These processes include the scattering of phonons by crystal defects, or the scattering from the surface of the crystal in case of high quality single crystal. Therefore, thermal conductance depends on the external dimensions of the crystal and the quality of the surface. Thus, temperature dependence of λL is determined by the specific heat and is therefore proportional to T3.[49]

Phonon quasimomentum is defined as ℏq and differs from normal momentum because it is only defined within an arbitrary reciprocal lattice vector. At higher temperatures (10 K < T < Θ), the conservation of energy   and quasimomentum  , where q1 is wave vector of the incident phonon and q2, q3 are wave vectors of the resultant phonons, may also involve a reciprocal lattice vector G complicating the energy transport process. These processes can also reverse the direction of energy transport.

Therefore, these processes are also known as Umklapp (U) processes and can only occur when phonons with sufficiently large q-vectors are excited, because unless the sum of q2 and q3 points outside of the Brillouin zone the momentum is conserved and the process is normal scattering (N-process). The probability of a phonon to have energy E is given by the Boltzmann distribution  . To U-process to occur the decaying phonon to have a wave vector q1 that is roughly half of the diameter of the Brillouin zone, because otherwise quasimomentum would not be conserved.

Therefore, these phonons have to possess energy of  , which is a significant fraction of Debye energy that is needed to generate new phonons. The probability for this is proportional to  , with  . Temperature dependence of the mean free path has an exponential form  . The presence of the reciprocal lattice wave vector implies a net phonon backscattering and a resistance to phonon and thermal transport resulting finite λL,[47] as it means that momentum is not conserved. Only momentum non-conserving processes can cause thermal resistance.[49]

At high temperatures (T > Θ), the mean free path and therefore λL has a temperature dependence T−1, to which one arrives from formula   by making the following approximation  [clarification needed] and writing  . This dependency is known as Eucken's law and originates from the temperature dependency of the probability for the U-process to occur.[47][49]

Thermal conductivity is usually described by the Boltzmann equation with the relaxation time approximation in which phonon scattering is a limiting factor. Another approach is to use analytic models or molecular dynamics or Monte Carlo based methods to describe thermal conductivity in solids.

Short wavelength phonons are strongly scattered by impurity atoms if an alloyed phase is present, but mid and long wavelength phonons are less affected. Mid and long wavelength phonons carry significant fraction of heat, so to further reduce lattice thermal conductivity one has to introduce structures to scatter these phonons. This is achieved by introducing interface scattering mechanism, which requires structures whose characteristic length is longer than that of impurity atom. Some possible ways to realize these interfaces are nanocomposites and embedded nanoparticles or structures.

Prediction edit

Because thermal conductivity depends continuously on quantities like temperature and material composition, it cannot be fully characterized by a finite number of experimental measurements. Predictive formulas become necessary if experimental values are not available under the physical conditions of interest. This capability is important in thermophysical simulations, where quantities like temperature and pressure vary continuously with space and time, and may encompass extreme conditions inaccessible to direct measurement.[50]

In fluids edit

For the simplest fluids, such as dilute monatomic gases and their mixtures, ab initio quantum mechanical computations can accurately predict thermal conductivity in terms of fundamental atomic properties—that is, without reference to existing measurements of thermal conductivity or other transport properties.[51] This method uses Chapman-Enskog theory to evaluate a low-density expansion of thermal conductivity. Chapman-Enskog theory, in turn, takes fundamental intermolecular potentials as input, which are computed ab initio from a quantum mechanical description.

For most fluids, such high-accuracy, first-principles computations are not feasible. Rather, theoretical or empirical expressions must be fit to existing thermal conductivity measurements. If such an expression is fit to high-fidelity data over a large range of temperatures and pressures, then it is called a "reference correlation" for that material. Reference correlations have been published for many pure materials; examples are carbon dioxide, ammonia, and benzene.[52][53][54] Many of these cover temperature and pressure ranges that encompass gas, liquid, and supercritical phases.

Thermophysical modeling software often relies on reference correlations for predicting thermal conductivity at user-specified temperature and pressure. These correlations may be proprietary. Examples are REFPROP[55] (proprietary) and CoolProp[56] (open-source).

Thermal conductivity can also be computed using the Green-Kubo relations, which express transport coefficients in terms of the statistics of molecular trajectories.[57] The advantage of these expressions is that they are formally exact and valid for general systems. The disadvantage is that they require detailed knowledge of particle trajectories, available only in computationally expensive simulations such as molecular dynamics. An accurate model for interparticle interactions is also required, which may be difficult to obtain for complex molecules.[58]

In solids edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ 1 Btu/(h⋅ft⋅°F) = 1.730735 W/(m⋅K)
  2. ^ R-values and U-values quoted in the US (based on the inch-pound units of measurement) do not correspond with and are not compatible with those used outside the US (based on the SI units of measurement).

Citations edit

  1. ^ Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, p. 266.
  2. ^ Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, pp. 266–267.
  3. ^ Holman, J.P. (1997), Heat Transfer (8th ed.), McGraw Hill, p. 2, ISBN 0-07-844785-2
  4. ^ Bejan, Adrian (1993), Heat Transfer, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 10–11, ISBN 0-471-50290-1
  5. ^ Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, p. 267.
  6. ^ a b Bejan, p. 34
  7. ^ Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, p. 305.
  8. ^ Gray, H.J.; Isaacs, Alan (1975). A New Dictionary of Physics (2nd ed.). Longman Group Limited. p. 251. ISBN 0582322421.
  9. ^ ASTM C168 − 15a Standard Terminology Relating to Thermal Insulation.
  10. ^ "Thermal Performance: Thermal Mass in Buildings". greenspec.co.uk. Retrieved 2022-09-13.
  11. ^ Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, p. 268.
  12. ^ Incropera, Frank P.; DeWitt, David P. (1996), Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer (4th ed.), Wiley, pp. 50–51, ISBN 0-471-30460-3
  13. ^ Perry, R. H.; Green, D. W., eds. (1997). Perry's Chemical Engineers' Handbook (7th ed.). McGraw-Hill. Table 1–4. ISBN 978-0-07-049841-9.
  14. ^ Daniel V. Schroeder (2000), An Introduction to Thermal Physics, Addison Wesley, p. 39, ISBN 0-201-38027-7
  15. ^ Chapman, Sydney; Cowling, T.G. (1970), The Mathematical Theory of Non-Uniform Gases (3rd ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 248
  16. ^ Heap, Michael J.; Kushnir, Alexandra R.L.; Vasseur, Jérémie; Wadsworth, Fabian B.; Harlé, Pauline; Baud, Patrick; Kennedy, Ben M.; Troll, Valentin R.; Deegan, Frances M. (2020-06-01). "The thermal properties of porous andesite". Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. 398: 106901. Bibcode:2020JVGR..39806901H. doi:10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2020.106901. ISSN 0377-0273. S2CID 219060797.
  17. ^ An unlikely competitor for diamond as the best thermal conductor, Phys.org news (July 8, 2013).
  18. ^ a b "Thermal Conductivity in W cm−1 K−1 of Metals and Semiconductors as a Function of Temperature", in CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 99th Edition (Internet Version 2018), John R. Rumble, ed., CRC Press/Taylor & Francis, Boca Raton, FL.
  19. ^ Lindon C. Thomas (1992), Heat Transfer, Prentice Hall, p. 8, ISBN 978-0133849424
  20. ^ "Thermal Conductivity of common Materials and Gases". www.engineeringtoolbox.com.
  21. ^ a b c Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, pp. 270–271.
  22. ^ a b Hahn, David W.; Özişik, M. Necati (2012). Heat conduction (3rd ed.). Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-470-90293-6.
  23. ^ Ramires, M. L. V.; Nieto de Castro, C. A.; Nagasaka, Y.; Nagashima, A.; Assael, M. J.; Wakeham, W. A. (July 6, 1994). "Standard reference data for the thermal conductivity of water". Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data. NIST. 24 (3): 1377–1381. doi:10.1063/1.555963. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  24. ^ Millat, Jürgen; Dymond, J.H.; Nieto de Castro, C.A. (2005). Transport properties of fluids: their correlation, prediction, and estimation. Cambridge New York: IUPAC/Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-02290-3.
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  29. ^ Chen, Ke; Song, Bai; Ravichandran, Navaneetha K.; Zheng, Qiye; Chen, Xi; Lee, Hwijong; Sun, Haoran; Li, Sheng; Gamage, Geethal Amila Gamage Udalamatta; Tian, Fei; Ding, Zhiwei (2020-01-31). "Ultrahigh thermal conductivity in isotope-enriched cubic boron nitride". Science. 367 (6477): 555–559. Bibcode:2020Sci...367..555C. doi:10.1126/science.aaz6149. hdl:1721.1/127819. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 31919128. S2CID 210131908.
  30. ^ see, e.g., Balescu, Radu (1975), Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 674–675, ISBN 978-0-471-04600-4
  31. ^ Incropera, Frank P.; DeWitt, David P. (1996), Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer (4th ed.), Wiley, p. 47, ISBN 0-471-30460-3
  32. ^ Chapman, Sydney; Cowling, T.G. (1970), The Mathematical Theory of Non-Uniform Gases (3rd ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 100–101
  33. ^ a b Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, p. 275.
  34. ^ Chapman & Cowling, p. 167
  35. ^ a b Chapman & Cowling, p. 247
  36. ^ Chapman & Cowling, pp. 249-251
  37. ^ Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, p. 276.
  38. ^ Bird, Stewart & Lightfoot 2006, p. 279.
  39. ^ a b Klemens, P.G. (1951). "The Thermal Conductivity of Dielectric Solids at Low Temperatures". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A. 208 (1092): 108. Bibcode:1951RSPSA.208..108K. doi:10.1098/rspa.1951.0147. S2CID 136951686.
  40. ^ Chang, G. K.; Jones, R. E. (1962). "Low-Temperature Thermal Conductivity of Amorphous Solids". Physical Review. 126 (6): 2055. Bibcode:1962PhRv..126.2055C. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.126.2055.
  41. ^ Crawford, Frank S. (1968). Berkeley Physics Course: Vol. 3: Waves. McGraw-Hill. p. 215. ISBN 9780070048607.
  42. ^ Pomeranchuk, I. (1941). "Thermal conductivity of the paramagnetic dielectrics at low temperatures". Journal of Physics USSR. 4: 357. ISSN 0368-3400.
  43. ^ Zeller, R. C.; Pohl, R. O. (1971). "Thermal Conductivity and Specific Heat of Non-crystalline Solids". Physical Review B. 4 (6): 2029. Bibcode:1971PhRvB...4.2029Z. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.4.2029.
  44. ^ Love, W. F. (1973). "Low-Temperature Thermal Brillouin Scattering in Fused Silica and Borosilicate Glass". Physical Review Letters. 31 (13): 822. Bibcode:1973PhRvL..31..822L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.31.822.
  45. ^ Zaitlin, M. P.; Anderson, M. C. (1975). "Phonon thermal transport in noncrystalline materials". Physical Review B. 12 (10): 4475. Bibcode:1975PhRvB..12.4475Z. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.12.4475.
  46. ^ Zaitlin, M. P.; Scherr, L. M.; Anderson, M. C. (1975). "Boundary scattering of phonons in noncrystalline materials". Physical Review B. 12 (10): 4487. Bibcode:1975PhRvB..12.4487Z. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.12.4487.
  47. ^ a b c d Pichanusakorn, P.; Bandaru, P. (2010). "Nanostructured thermoelectrics". Materials Science and Engineering: R: Reports. 67 (2–4): 19–63. doi:10.1016/j.mser.2009.10.001. S2CID 46456426.
  48. ^ Roufosse, Micheline; Klemens, P. G. (1973-06-15). "Thermal Conductivity of Complex Dielectric Crystals". Physical Review B. 7 (12): 5379–5386. Bibcode:1973PhRvB...7.5379R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.7.5379.
  49. ^ a b c d Ibach, H.; Luth, H. (2009). Solid-State Physics: An Introduction to Principles of Materials Science. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-93803-3.
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Sources edit

  • Bird, R.B.; Stewart, W.E.; Lightfoot, E.N. (2006). Transport Phenomena. Transport Phenomena. Vol. 1. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-470-11539-8.

Further reading edit

Undergraduate-level texts (engineering) edit

  • Bird, R. Byron; Stewart, Warren E.; Lightfoot, Edwin N. (2007), Transport Phenomena (2nd ed.), John Wiley & Sons, Inc., ISBN 978-0-470-11539-8. A standard, modern reference.
  • Incropera, Frank P.; DeWitt, David P. (1996), Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer (4th ed.), Wiley, ISBN 0-471-30460-3
  • Bejan, Adrian (1993), Heat Transfer, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-50290-1
  • Holman, J.P. (1997), Heat Transfer (8th ed.), McGraw Hill, ISBN 0-07-844785-2
  • Callister, William D. (2003), "Appendix B", Materials Science and Engineering - An Introduction, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-22471-5

Undergraduate-level texts (physics) edit

  • Halliday, David; Resnick, Robert; & Walker, Jearl (1997). Fundamentals of Physics (5th ed.). John Wiley and Sons, New York ISBN 0-471-10558-9. An elementary treatment.
  • Daniel V. Schroeder (1999), An Introduction to Thermal Physics, Addison Wesley, ISBN 978-0-201-38027-9. A brief, intermediate-level treatment.
  • Reif, F. (1965), Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics, McGraw-Hill. An advanced treatment.

Graduate-level texts edit

  • Balescu, Radu (1975), Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-0-471-04600-4
  • Chapman, Sydney; Cowling, T.G. (1970), The Mathematical Theory of Non-Uniform Gases (3rd ed.), Cambridge University Press. A very advanced but classic text on the theory of transport processes in gases.
  • Reid, C. R., Prausnitz, J. M., Poling B. E., Properties of gases and liquids, IV edition, Mc Graw-Hill, 1987
  • Srivastava G. P (1990), The Physics of Phonons. Adam Hilger, IOP Publishing Ltd, Bristol

External links edit

  • Thermopedia THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY
  • Contribution of Interionic Forces to the Thermal Conductivity of Dilute Electrolyte Solutions The Journal of Chemical Physics 41, 3924 (1964)
  • The importance of Soil Thermal Conductivity for power companies
  • Thermal Conductivity of Gas Mixtures in Chemical Equilibrium. II The Journal of Chemical Physics 32, 1005 (1960)

thermal, conductivity, resistivity, thermal, conductivity, values, list, thermal, conductivities, thermal, conductivity, material, measure, ability, conduct, heat, commonly, denoted, displaystyle, displaystyle, lambda, displaystyle, kappa, measured, thermal, c. For thermal conductivity values see List of thermal conductivities The thermal conductivity of a material is a measure of its ability to conduct heat It is commonly denoted by k displaystyle k l displaystyle lambda or k displaystyle kappa and is measured in W m 1 K 1 Thermal conductivityCommon symbolskSI unitwatt per meter kelvin W m K In SI base unitskg m s 3 K 1DimensionL M T 3 8 1 displaystyle mathsf L mathsf M mathsf T 3 mathsf Theta 1 Thermal resistivityCommon symbolsrSI unitkelvin meter per watt K m W In SI base unitskg 1 m 1 s3 KDimensionL M T 3 8 1 displaystyle mathsf L mathsf M mathsf T 3 mathsf Theta 1 Heat transfer occurs at a lower rate in materials of low thermal conductivity than in materials of high thermal conductivity For instance metals typically have high thermal conductivity and are very efficient at conducting heat while the opposite is true for insulating materials like mineral wool or Styrofoam Correspondingly materials of high thermal conductivity are widely used in heat sink applications and materials of low thermal conductivity are used as thermal insulation The reciprocal of thermal conductivity is called thermal resistivity The defining equation for thermal conductivity is q k T displaystyle mathbf q k nabla T where q displaystyle mathbf q is the heat flux k displaystyle k is the thermal conductivity and T displaystyle nabla T is the temperature gradient This is known as Fourier s Law for heat conduction Although commonly expressed as a scalar the most general form of thermal conductivity is a second rank tensor However the tensorial description only becomes necessary in materials which are anisotropic Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Simple definition 1 2 General definition 1 3 Other quantities 2 Units 3 Measurement 4 Experimental values 5 Influencing factors 5 1 Temperature 5 2 Chemical phase 5 3 Thermal anisotropy 5 4 Electrical conductivity 5 5 Magnetic field 5 6 Gaseous phases 5 7 Isotopic purity 6 Molecular origins 6 1 Gases 6 2 Liquids 6 3 Metals 6 4 Lattice waves phonons in dielectric solids 7 Prediction 7 1 In fluids 7 2 In solids 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 9 4 Further reading 9 4 1 Undergraduate level texts engineering 9 4 2 Undergraduate level texts physics 9 4 3 Graduate level texts 10 External linksDefinition editSimple definition edit nbsp Thermal conductivity can be defined in terms of the heat flow q displaystyle q nbsp across a temperature difference Consider a solid material placed between two environments of different temperatures Let T 1 displaystyle T 1 nbsp be the temperature at x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp and T 2 displaystyle T 2 nbsp be the temperature at x L displaystyle x L nbsp and suppose T 2 gt T 1 displaystyle T 2 gt T 1 nbsp An example of this scenario is a building on a cold winter day the solid material in this case is the building wall separating the cold outdoor environment from the warm indoor environment According to the second law of thermodynamics heat will flow from the hot environment to the cold one as the temperature difference is equalized by diffusion This is quantified in terms of a heat flux q displaystyle q nbsp which gives the rate per unit area at which heat flows in a given direction in this case minus x direction In many materials q displaystyle q nbsp is observed to be directly proportional to the temperature difference and inversely proportional to the separation distance L displaystyle L nbsp 1 q k T 2 T 1 L displaystyle q k cdot frac T 2 T 1 L nbsp The constant of proportionality k displaystyle k nbsp is the thermal conductivity it is a physical property of the material In the present scenario since T 2 gt T 1 displaystyle T 2 gt T 1 nbsp heat flows in the minus x direction and q displaystyle q nbsp is negative which in turn means that k gt 0 displaystyle k gt 0 nbsp In general k displaystyle k nbsp is always defined to be positive The same definition of k displaystyle k nbsp can also be extended to gases and liquids provided other modes of energy transport such as convection and radiation are eliminated or accounted for The preceding derivation assumes that the k displaystyle k nbsp does not change significantly as temperature is varied from T 1 displaystyle T 1 nbsp to T 2 displaystyle T 2 nbsp Cases in which the temperature variation of k displaystyle k nbsp is non negligible must be addressed using the more general definition of k displaystyle k nbsp discussed below General definition edit Thermal conduction is defined as the transport of energy due to random molecular motion across a temperature gradient It is distinguished from energy transport by convection and molecular work in that it does not involve macroscopic flows or work performing internal stresses Energy flow due to thermal conduction is classified as heat and is quantified by the vector q r t displaystyle mathbf q mathbf r t nbsp which gives the heat flux at position r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp and time t displaystyle t nbsp According to the second law of thermodynamics heat flows from high to low temperature Hence it is reasonable to postulate that q r t displaystyle mathbf q mathbf r t nbsp is proportional to the gradient of the temperature field T r t displaystyle T mathbf r t nbsp i e q r t k T r t displaystyle mathbf q mathbf r t k nabla T mathbf r t nbsp where the constant of proportionality k gt 0 displaystyle k gt 0 nbsp is the thermal conductivity This is called Fourier s law of heat conduction Despite its name it is not a law but a definition of thermal conductivity in terms of the independent physical quantities q r t displaystyle mathbf q mathbf r t nbsp and T r t displaystyle T mathbf r t nbsp 2 3 As such its usefulness depends on the ability to determine k displaystyle k nbsp for a given material under given conditions The constant k displaystyle k nbsp itself usually depends on T r t displaystyle T mathbf r t nbsp and thereby implicitly on space and time An explicit space and time dependence could also occur if the material is inhomogeneous or changing with time 4 In some solids thermal conduction is anisotropic i e the heat flux is not always parallel to the temperature gradient To account for such behavior a tensorial form of Fourier s law must be used q r t k T r t displaystyle mathbf q mathbf r t boldsymbol kappa cdot nabla T mathbf r t nbsp where k displaystyle boldsymbol kappa nbsp is symmetric second rank tensor called the thermal conductivity tensor 5 An implicit assumption in the above description is the presence of local thermodynamic equilibrium which allows one to define a temperature field T r t displaystyle T mathbf r t nbsp This assumption could be violated in systems that are unable to attain local equilibrium as might happen in the presence of strong nonequilibrium driving or long ranged interactions Other quantities edit In engineering practice it is common to work in terms of quantities which are derivative to thermal conductivity and implicitly take into account design specific features such as component dimensions For instance thermal conductance is defined as the quantity of heat that passes in unit time through a plate of particular area and thickness when its opposite faces differ in temperature by one kelvin For a plate of thermal conductivity k displaystyle k nbsp area A displaystyle A nbsp and thickness L displaystyle L nbsp the conductance is k A L displaystyle kA L nbsp measured in W K 1 6 The relationship between thermal conductivity and conductance is analogous to the relationship between electrical conductivity and electrical conductance Thermal resistance is the inverse of thermal conductance 6 It is a convenient measure to use in multicomponent design since thermal resistances are additive when occurring in series 7 There is also a measure known as the heat transfer coefficient the quantity of heat that passes per unit time through a unit area of a plate of particular thickness when its opposite faces differ in temperature by one kelvin 8 In ASTM C168 15 this area independent quantity is referred to as the thermal conductance 9 The reciprocal of the heat transfer coefficient is thermal insolance In summary for a plate of thermal conductivity k displaystyle k nbsp area A displaystyle A nbsp and thickness L displaystyle L nbsp thermal conductance k A L displaystyle kA L nbsp measured in W K 1 thermal resistance L k A displaystyle L kA nbsp measured in K W 1 heat transfer coefficient k L displaystyle k L nbsp measured in W K 1 m 2 thermal insulance L k displaystyle L k nbsp measured in K m2 W 1 The heat transfer coefficient is also known as thermal admittance in the sense that the material may be seen as admitting heat to flow 10 An additional term thermal transmittance quantifies the thermal conductance of a structure along with heat transfer due to convection and radiation citation needed It is measured in the same units as thermal conductance and is sometimes known as the composite thermal conductance The term U value is also used Finally thermal diffusivity a displaystyle alpha nbsp combines thermal conductivity with density and specific heat 11 a k r c p displaystyle alpha frac k rho c p nbsp As such it quantifies the thermal inertia of a material i e the relative difficulty in heating a material to a given temperature using heat sources applied at the boundary 12 Units editIn the International System of Units SI thermal conductivity is measured in watts per meter kelvin W m K Some papers report in watts per centimeter kelvin W cm K In imperial units thermal conductivity is measured in BTU h ft F note 1 13 The dimension of thermal conductivity is M1L1T 38 1 expressed in terms of the dimensions mass M length L time T and temperature 8 Other units which are closely related to the thermal conductivity are in common use in the construction and textile industries The construction industry makes use of measures such as the R value resistance and the U value transmittance or conductance Although related to the thermal conductivity of a material used in an insulation product or assembly R and U values are measured per unit area and depend on the specified thickness of the product or assembly note 2 Likewise the textile industry has several units including the tog and the clo which express thermal resistance of a material in a way analogous to the R values used in the construction industry Measurement editMain article Thermal conductivity measurement There are several ways to measure thermal conductivity each is suitable for a limited range of materials Broadly speaking there are two categories of measurement techniques steady state and transient Steady state techniques infer the thermal conductivity from measurements on the state of a material once a steady state temperature profile has been reached whereas transient techniques operate on the instantaneous state of a system during the approach to steady state Lacking an explicit time component steady state techniques do not require complicated signal analysis steady state implies constant signals The disadvantage is that a well engineered experimental setup is usually needed and the time required to reach steady state precludes rapid measurement In comparison with solid materials the thermal properties of fluids are more difficult to study experimentally This is because in addition to thermal conduction convective and radiative energy transport are usually present unless measures are taken to limit these processes The formation of an insulating boundary layer can also result in an apparent reduction in the thermal conductivity 14 15 Experimental values edit nbsp Experimental values of thermal conductivity clarification needed Main article List of thermal conductivities The thermal conductivities of common substances span at least four orders of magnitude 16 Gases generally have low thermal conductivity and pure metals have high thermal conductivity For example under standard conditions the thermal conductivity of copper is over 10000 times that of air Of all materials allotropes of carbon such as graphite and diamond are usually credited with having the highest thermal conductivities at room temperature 17 The thermal conductivity of natural diamond at room temperature is several times higher than that of a highly conductive metal such as copper although the precise value varies depending on the diamond type 18 Thermal conductivities of selected substances are tabulated below an expanded list can be found in the list of thermal conductivities These values are illustrative estimates only as they do not account for measurement uncertainties or variability in material definitions Substance Thermal conductivity W m 1 K 1 Temperature C Air 19 0 026 25Styrofoam 20 0 033 25Water 21 0 6089 26 85Concrete 21 0 92 Copper 21 384 1 18 05Natural diamond 18 895 1350 26 85Influencing factors editTemperature edit The effect of temperature on thermal conductivity is different for metals and nonmetals In metals heat conductivity is primarily due to free electrons Following the Wiedemann Franz law thermal conductivity of metals is approximately proportional to the absolute temperature in kelvins times electrical conductivity In pure metals the electrical conductivity decreases with increasing temperature and thus the product of the two the thermal conductivity stays approximately constant However as temperatures approach absolute zero the thermal conductivity decreases sharply 22 In alloys the change in electrical conductivity is usually smaller and thus thermal conductivity increases with temperature often proportionally to temperature Many pure metals have a peak thermal conductivity between 2 K and 10 K On the other hand heat conductivity in nonmetals is mainly due to lattice vibrations phonons Except for high quality crystals at low temperatures the phonon mean free path is not reduced significantly at higher temperatures Thus the thermal conductivity of nonmetals is approximately constant at high temperatures At low temperatures well below the Debye temperature thermal conductivity decreases as does the heat capacity due to carrier scattering from defects 22 Chemical phase edit When a material undergoes a phase change e g from solid to liquid the thermal conductivity may change abruptly For instance when ice melts to form liquid water at 0 C the thermal conductivity changes from 2 18 W m K to 0 56 W m K 23 Even more dramatically the thermal conductivity of a fluid diverges in the vicinity of the vapor liquid critical point 24 Thermal anisotropy edit Some substances such as non cubic crystals can exhibit different thermal conductivities along different crystal axes Sapphire is a notable example of variable thermal conductivity based on orientation and temperature with 35 W m K along the c axis and 32 W m K along the a axis 25 Wood generally conducts better along the grain than across it Other examples of materials where the thermal conductivity varies with direction are metals that have undergone heavy cold pressing laminated materials cables the materials used for the Space Shuttle thermal protection system and fiber reinforced composite structures 26 When anisotropy is present the direction of heat flow may differ from the direction of the thermal gradient Electrical conductivity edit In metals thermal conductivity is approximately correlated with electrical conductivity according to the Wiedemann Franz law as freely moving valence electrons transfer not only electric current but also heat energy However the general correlation between electrical and thermal conductance does not hold for other materials due to the increased importance of phonon carriers for heat in non metals Highly electrically conductive silver is less thermally conductive than diamond which is an electrical insulator but conducts heat via phonons due to its orderly array of atoms Magnetic field edit The influence of magnetic fields on thermal conductivity is known as the thermal Hall effect or Righi Leduc effect Gaseous phases edit nbsp Exhaust system components with ceramic coatings having a low thermal conductivity reduce heating of nearby sensitive componentsIn the absence of convection air and other gases are good insulators Therefore many insulating materials function simply by having a large number of gas filled pockets which obstruct heat conduction pathways Examples of these include expanded and extruded polystyrene popularly referred to as styrofoam and silica aerogel as well as warm clothes Natural biological insulators such as fur and feathers achieve similar effects by trapping air in pores pockets or voids Low density gases such as hydrogen and helium typically have high thermal conductivity Dense gases such as xenon and dichlorodifluoromethane have low thermal conductivity An exception sulfur hexafluoride a dense gas has a relatively high thermal conductivity due to its high heat capacity Argon and krypton gases denser than air are often used in insulated glazing double paned windows to improve their insulation characteristics The thermal conductivity through bulk materials in porous or granular form is governed by the type of gas in the gaseous phase and its pressure 27 At low pressures the thermal conductivity of a gaseous phase is reduced with this behaviour governed by the Knudsen number defined as K n l d displaystyle K n l d nbsp where l displaystyle l nbsp is the mean free path of gas molecules and d displaystyle d nbsp is the typical gap size of the space filled by the gas In a granular material d displaystyle d nbsp corresponds to the characteristic size of the gaseous phase in the pores or intergranular spaces 27 Isotopic purity edit The thermal conductivity of a crystal can depend strongly on isotopic purity assuming other lattice defects are negligible A notable example is diamond at a temperature of around 100 K the thermal conductivity increases from 10 000 W m 1 K 1 for natural type IIa diamond 98 9 12C to 41 000 for 99 9 enriched synthetic diamond A value of 200 000 is predicted for 99 999 12C at 80 K assuming an otherwise pure crystal 28 The thermal conductivity of 99 isotopically enriched cubic boron nitride is 1400 W m 1 K 1 29 which is 90 higher than that of natural boron nitride Molecular origins editThe molecular mechanisms of thermal conduction vary among different materials and in general depend on details of the microscopic structure and molecular interactions As such thermal conductivity is difficult to predict from first principles Any expressions for thermal conductivity which are exact and general e g the Green Kubo relations are difficult to apply in practice typically consisting of averages over multiparticle correlation functions 30 A notable exception is a monatomic dilute gas for which a well developed theory exists expressing thermal conductivity accurately and explicitly in terms of molecular parameters In a gas thermal conduction is mediated by discrete molecular collisions In a simplified picture of a solid thermal conduction occurs by two mechanisms 1 the migration of free electrons and 2 lattice vibrations phonons The first mechanism dominates in pure metals and the second in non metallic solids In liquids by contrast the precise microscopic mechanisms of thermal conduction are poorly understood 31 Gases edit See also Kinetic theory of gases In a simplified model of a dilute monatomic gas molecules are modeled as rigid spheres which are in constant motion colliding elastically with each other and with the walls of their container Consider such a gas at temperature T displaystyle T nbsp and with density r displaystyle rho nbsp specific heat c v displaystyle c v nbsp and molecular mass m displaystyle m nbsp Under these assumptions an elementary calculation yields for the thermal conductivity k b r l c v 2 k B T p m displaystyle k beta rho lambda c v sqrt frac 2k text B T pi m nbsp where b displaystyle beta nbsp is a numerical constant of order 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp k B displaystyle k text B nbsp is the Boltzmann constant and l displaystyle lambda nbsp is the mean free path which measures the average distance a molecule travels between collisions 32 Since l displaystyle lambda nbsp is inversely proportional to density this equation predicts that thermal conductivity is independent of density for fixed temperature The explanation is that increasing density increases the number of molecules which carry energy but decreases the average distance l displaystyle lambda nbsp a molecule can travel before transferring its energy to a different molecule these two effects cancel out For most gases this prediction agrees well with experiments at pressures up to about 10 atmospheres 33 On the other hand experiments show a more rapid increase with temperature than k T displaystyle k propto sqrt T nbsp here l displaystyle lambda nbsp is independent of T displaystyle T nbsp This failure of the elementary theory can be traced to the oversimplified elastic sphere model and in particular to the fact that the interparticle attractions present in all real world gases are ignored To incorporate more complex interparticle interactions a systematic approach is necessary One such approach is provided by Chapman Enskog theory which derives explicit expressions for thermal conductivity starting from the Boltzmann equation The Boltzmann equation in turn provides a statistical description of a dilute gas for generic interparticle interactions For a monatomic gas expressions for k displaystyle k nbsp derived in this way take the form k 25 32 p m k B T p s 2 W T c v displaystyle k frac 25 32 frac sqrt pi mk text B T pi sigma 2 Omega T c v nbsp where s displaystyle sigma nbsp is an effective particle diameter and W T displaystyle Omega T nbsp is a function of temperature whose explicit form depends on the interparticle interaction law 34 33 For rigid elastic spheres W T displaystyle Omega T nbsp is independent of T displaystyle T nbsp and very close to 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp More complex interaction laws introduce a weak temperature dependence The precise nature of the dependence is not always easy to discern however as W T displaystyle Omega T nbsp is defined as a multi dimensional integral which may not be expressible in terms of elementary functions An alternate equivalent way to present the result is in terms of the gas viscosity m displaystyle mu nbsp which can also be calculated in the Chapman Enskog approach k f m c v displaystyle k f mu c v nbsp where f displaystyle f nbsp is a numerical factor which in general depends on the molecular model For smooth spherically symmetric molecules however f displaystyle f nbsp is very close to 2 5 displaystyle 2 5 nbsp not deviating by more than 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp for a variety of interparticle force laws 35 Since k displaystyle k nbsp m displaystyle mu nbsp and c v displaystyle c v nbsp are each well defined physical quantities which can be measured independent of each other this expression provides a convenient test of the theory For monatomic gases such as the noble gases the agreement with experiment is fairly good 36 For gases whose molecules are not spherically symmetric the expression k f m c v displaystyle k f mu c v nbsp still holds In contrast with spherically symmetric molecules however f displaystyle f nbsp varies significantly depending on the particular form of the interparticle interactions this is a result of the energy exchanges between the internal and translational degrees of freedom of the molecules An explicit treatment of this effect is difficult in the Chapman Enskog approach Alternately the approximate expression f 1 4 9 g 5 displaystyle f 1 4 9 gamma 5 nbsp was suggested by Eucken where g displaystyle gamma nbsp is the heat capacity ratio of the gas 35 37 The entirety of this section assumes the mean free path l displaystyle lambda nbsp is small compared with macroscopic system dimensions In extremely dilute gases this assumption fails and thermal conduction is described instead by an apparent thermal conductivity which decreases with density Ultimately as the density goes to 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp the system approaches a vacuum and thermal conduction ceases entirely Liquids edit The exact mechanisms of thermal conduction are poorly understood in liquids there is no molecular picture which is both simple and accurate An example of a simple but very rough theory is that of Bridgman in which a liquid is ascribed a local molecular structure similar to that of a solid i e with molecules located approximately on a lattice Elementary calculations then lead to the expression k 3 N A V 2 3 k B v s displaystyle k 3 N text A V 2 3 k text B v text s nbsp where N A displaystyle N text A nbsp is the Avogadro constant V displaystyle V nbsp is the volume of a mole of liquid and v s displaystyle v text s nbsp is the speed of sound in the liquid This is commonly called Bridgman s equation 38 Metals edit Main article Free electron model For metals at low temperatures the heat is carried mainly by the free electrons In this case the mean velocity is the Fermi velocity which is temperature independent The mean free path is determined by the impurities and the crystal imperfections which are temperature independent as well So the only temperature dependent quantity is the heat capacity c which in this case is proportional to T So k k 0 T metal at low temperature displaystyle k k 0 T text metal at low temperature nbsp with k0 a constant For pure metals k0 is large so the thermal conductivity is high At higher temperatures the mean free path is limited by the phonons so the thermal conductivity tends to decrease with temperature In alloys the density of the impurities is very high so l and consequently k are small Therefore alloys such as stainless steel can be used for thermal insulation Lattice waves phonons in dielectric solids edit This section may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details January 2019 template removal help This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Thermal conductivity and resistivity news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 template removal help Heat transport in both amorphous and crystalline dielectric solids is by way of elastic vibrations of the lattice i e phonons This transport mechanism is theorized to be limited by the elastic scattering of acoustic phonons at lattice defects This has been confirmed by the experiments of Chang and Jones on commercial glasses and glass ceramics where the mean free paths were found to be limited by internal boundary scattering to length scales of 10 2 cm to 10 3 cm 39 40 The phonon mean free path has been associated directly with the effective relaxation length for processes without directional correlation If Vg is the group velocity of a phonon wave packet then the relaxation length l displaystyle l nbsp is defined as l V g t displaystyle l V text g t nbsp where t is the characteristic relaxation time Since longitudinal waves have a much greater phase velocity than transverse waves 41 Vlong is much greater than Vtrans and the relaxation length or mean free path of longitudinal phonons will be much greater Thus thermal conductivity will be largely determined by the speed of longitudinal phonons 39 42 Regarding the dependence of wave velocity on wavelength or frequency dispersion low frequency phonons of long wavelength will be limited in relaxation length by elastic Rayleigh scattering This type of light scattering from small particles is proportional to the fourth power of the frequency For higher frequencies the power of the frequency will decrease until at highest frequencies scattering is almost frequency independent Similar arguments were subsequently generalized to many glass forming substances using Brillouin scattering 43 44 45 46 Phonons in the acoustical branch dominate the phonon heat conduction as they have greater energy dispersion and therefore a greater distribution of phonon velocities Additional optical modes could also be caused by the presence of internal structure i e charge or mass at a lattice point it is implied that the group velocity of these modes is low and therefore their contribution to the lattice thermal conductivity lL k displaystyle kappa nbsp L is small 47 Each phonon mode can be split into one longitudinal and two transverse polarization branches By extrapolating the phenomenology of lattice points to the unit cells it is seen that the total number of degrees of freedom is 3pq when p is the number of primitive cells with q atoms unit cell From these only 3p are associated with the acoustic modes the remaining 3p q 1 are accommodated through the optical branches This implies that structures with larger p and q contain a greater number of optical modes and a reduced lL From these ideas it can be concluded that increasing crystal complexity which is described by a complexity factor CF defined as the number of atoms primitive unit cell decreases lL 48 failed verification This was done by assuming that the relaxation time t decreases with increasing number of atoms in the unit cell and then scaling the parameters of the expression for thermal conductivity in high temperatures accordingly 47 Describing anharmonic effects is complicated because an exact treatment as in the harmonic case is not possible and phonons are no longer exact eigensolutions to the equations of motion Even if the state of motion of the crystal could be described with a plane wave at a particular time its accuracy would deteriorate progressively with time Time development would have to be described by introducing a spectrum of other phonons which is known as the phonon decay The two most important anharmonic effects are the thermal expansion and the phonon thermal conductivity Only when the phonon number n deviates from the equilibrium value n 0 can a thermal current arise as stated in the following expression Q x 1 V q j ℏ w n n 0 v x displaystyle Q x frac 1 V sum q j hslash omega left left langle n right rangle left langle n right rangle 0 right v x text nbsp where v is the energy transport velocity of phonons Only two mechanisms exist that can cause time variation of n in a particular region The number of phonons that diffuse into the region from neighboring regions differs from those that diffuse out or phonons decay inside the same region into other phonons A special form of the Boltzmann equation d n d t n t diff n t decay displaystyle frac d left langle n right rangle dt left frac partial left langle n right rangle partial t right text diff left frac partial left langle n right rangle partial t right text decay nbsp states this When steady state conditions are assumed the total time derivate of phonon number is zero because the temperature is constant in time and therefore the phonon number stays also constant Time variation due to phonon decay is described with a relaxation time t approximation n t decay n n 0 t displaystyle left frac partial left langle n right rangle partial t right text decay text frac left langle n right rangle left langle n right rangle 0 tau nbsp which states that the more the phonon number deviates from its equilibrium value the more its time variation increases At steady state conditions and local thermal equilibrium are assumed we get the following equation n t diff v x n 0 T T x displaystyle left frac partial left n right partial t right text diff v x frac partial left n right 0 partial T frac partial T partial x text nbsp Using the relaxation time approximation for the Boltzmann equation and assuming steady state conditions the phonon thermal conductivity lL can be determined The temperature dependence for lL originates from the variety of processes whose significance for lL depends on the temperature range of interest Mean free path is one factor that determines the temperature dependence for lL as stated in the following equation l L 1 3 V q j v q j L q j T ϵ w q j T displaystyle lambda L frac 1 3V sum q j v left q j right Lambda left q j right frac partial partial T epsilon left omega left q j right T right nbsp where L is the mean free path for phonon and T ϵ displaystyle frac partial partial T epsilon nbsp denotes the heat capacity This equation is a result of combining the four previous equations with each other and knowing that v x 2 1 3 v 2 displaystyle left langle v x 2 right rangle frac 1 3 v 2 nbsp for cubic or isotropic systems and L v t displaystyle Lambda v tau nbsp 49 At low temperatures lt 10 K the anharmonic interaction does not influence the mean free path and therefore the thermal resistivity is determined only from processes for which q conservation does not hold These processes include the scattering of phonons by crystal defects or the scattering from the surface of the crystal in case of high quality single crystal Therefore thermal conductance depends on the external dimensions of the crystal and the quality of the surface Thus temperature dependence of lL is determined by the specific heat and is therefore proportional to T3 49 Phonon quasimomentum is defined as ℏq and differs from normal momentum because it is only defined within an arbitrary reciprocal lattice vector At higher temperatures 10 K lt T lt 8 the conservation of energy ℏ w 1 ℏ w 2 ℏ w 3 displaystyle hslash omega 1 hslash omega 2 hslash omega 3 nbsp and quasimomentum q 1 q 2 q 3 G displaystyle mathbf q 1 mathbf q 2 mathbf q 3 mathbf G nbsp where q1 is wave vector of the incident phonon and q2 q3 are wave vectors of the resultant phonons may also involve a reciprocal lattice vector G complicating the energy transport process These processes can also reverse the direction of energy transport Therefore these processes are also known as Umklapp U processes and can only occur when phonons with sufficiently large q vectors are excited because unless the sum of q2 and q3 points outside of the Brillouin zone the momentum is conserved and the process is normal scattering N process The probability of a phonon to have energy E is given by the Boltzmann distribution P e E k T displaystyle P propto e E kT nbsp To U process to occur the decaying phonon to have a wave vector q1 that is roughly half of the diameter of the Brillouin zone because otherwise quasimomentum would not be conserved Therefore these phonons have to possess energy of k 8 2 displaystyle sim k Theta 2 nbsp which is a significant fraction of Debye energy that is needed to generate new phonons The probability for this is proportional to e 8 b T displaystyle e Theta bT nbsp with b 2 displaystyle b 2 nbsp Temperature dependence of the mean free path has an exponential form e 8 b T displaystyle e Theta bT nbsp The presence of the reciprocal lattice wave vector implies a net phonon backscattering and a resistance to phonon and thermal transport resulting finite lL 47 as it means that momentum is not conserved Only momentum non conserving processes can cause thermal resistance 49 At high temperatures T gt 8 the mean free path and therefore lL has a temperature dependence T 1 to which one arrives from formula e 8 b T displaystyle e Theta bT nbsp by making the following approximation e x x x lt 1 displaystyle e x propto x text text left x right lt 1 nbsp clarification needed and writing x 8 b T displaystyle x Theta bT nbsp This dependency is known as Eucken s law and originates from the temperature dependency of the probability for the U process to occur 47 49 Thermal conductivity is usually described by the Boltzmann equation with the relaxation time approximation in which phonon scattering is a limiting factor Another approach is to use analytic models or molecular dynamics or Monte Carlo based methods to describe thermal conductivity in solids Short wavelength phonons are strongly scattered by impurity atoms if an alloyed phase is present but mid and long wavelength phonons are less affected Mid and long wavelength phonons carry significant fraction of heat so to further reduce lattice thermal conductivity one has to introduce structures to scatter these phonons This is achieved by introducing interface scattering mechanism which requires structures whose characteristic length is longer than that of impurity atom Some possible ways to realize these interfaces are nanocomposites and embedded nanoparticles or structures Prediction editBecause thermal conductivity depends continuously on quantities like temperature and material composition it cannot be fully characterized by a finite number of experimental measurements Predictive formulas become necessary if experimental values are not available under the physical conditions of interest This capability is important in thermophysical simulations where quantities like temperature and pressure vary continuously with space and time and may encompass extreme conditions inaccessible to direct measurement 50 In fluids edit For the simplest fluids such as dilute monatomic gases and their mixtures ab initio quantum mechanical computations can accurately predict thermal conductivity in terms of fundamental atomic properties that is without reference to existing measurements of thermal conductivity or other transport properties 51 This method uses Chapman Enskog theory to evaluate a low density expansion of thermal conductivity Chapman Enskog theory in turn takes fundamental intermolecular potentials as input which are computed ab initio from a quantum mechanical description For most fluids such high accuracy first principles computations are not feasible Rather theoretical or empirical expressions must be fit to existing thermal conductivity measurements If such an expression is fit to high fidelity data over a large range of temperatures and pressures then it is called a reference correlation for that material Reference correlations have been published for many pure materials examples are carbon dioxide ammonia and benzene 52 53 54 Many of these cover temperature and pressure ranges that encompass gas liquid and supercritical phases Thermophysical modeling software often relies on reference correlations for predicting thermal conductivity at user specified temperature and pressure These correlations may be proprietary Examples are REFPROP 55 proprietary and CoolProp 56 open source Thermal conductivity can also be computed using the Green Kubo relations which express transport coefficients in terms of the statistics of molecular trajectories 57 The advantage of these expressions is that they are formally exact and valid for general systems The disadvantage is that they require detailed knowledge of particle trajectories available only in computationally expensive simulations such as molecular dynamics An accurate model for interparticle interactions is also required which may be difficult to obtain for complex molecules 58 In solids edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2022 See also editCopper in heat exchangers Heat pump Heat transfer Heat transfer mechanisms Insulated pipe Interfacial thermal resistance Laser flash analysis List of thermal conductivities Phase change material R value insulation Specific heat capacity Thermal bridge Thermal conductance quantum Thermal contact conductance Thermal diffusivity Thermal effusivity Thermal entrance length Thermal interface material Thermal diode Thermal resistance Thermistor Thermocouple Thermodynamics Thermal conductivity measurement Refractory metalsReferences editNotes edit 1 Btu h ft F 1 730735 W m K R values and U values quoted in the US based on the inch pound units of measurement do not correspond with and are not compatible with those used outside the US based on the SI units of measurement Citations edit Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 p 266 Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 pp 266 267 Holman J P 1997 Heat Transfer 8th ed McGraw Hill p 2 ISBN 0 07 844785 2 Bejan Adrian 1993 Heat Transfer John Wiley amp Sons pp 10 11 ISBN 0 471 50290 1 Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 p 267 a b Bejan p 34 Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 p 305 Gray H J Isaacs Alan 1975 A New Dictionary of Physics 2nd ed Longman Group Limited p 251 ISBN 0582322421 ASTM C168 15a Standard Terminology Relating to Thermal Insulation Thermal Performance Thermal Mass in Buildings greenspec co uk Retrieved 2022 09 13 Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 p 268 Incropera Frank P DeWitt David P 1996 Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer 4th ed Wiley pp 50 51 ISBN 0 471 30460 3 Perry R H Green D W eds 1997 Perry s Chemical Engineers Handbook 7th ed McGraw Hill Table 1 4 ISBN 978 0 07 049841 9 Daniel V Schroeder 2000 An Introduction to Thermal Physics Addison Wesley p 39 ISBN 0 201 38027 7 Chapman Sydney Cowling T G 1970 The Mathematical Theory of Non Uniform Gases 3rd ed Cambridge University Press p 248 Heap Michael J Kushnir Alexandra R L Vasseur Jeremie Wadsworth Fabian B Harle Pauline Baud Patrick Kennedy Ben M Troll Valentin R Deegan Frances M 2020 06 01 The thermal properties of porous andesite Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 398 106901 Bibcode 2020JVGR 39806901H doi 10 1016 j jvolgeores 2020 106901 ISSN 0377 0273 S2CID 219060797 An unlikely competitor for diamond as the best thermal conductor Phys org news July 8 2013 a b Thermal Conductivity in W cm 1 K 1 of Metals and Semiconductors as a Function of Temperature in CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 99th Edition Internet Version 2018 John R Rumble ed CRC Press Taylor amp Francis Boca Raton FL Lindon C Thomas 1992 Heat Transfer Prentice Hall p 8 ISBN 978 0133849424 Thermal Conductivity of common Materials and Gases www engineeringtoolbox com a b c Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 pp 270 271 a b Hahn David W Ozisik M Necati 2012 Heat conduction 3rd ed Hoboken N J Wiley p 5 ISBN 978 0 470 90293 6 Ramires M L V Nieto de Castro C A Nagasaka Y Nagashima A Assael M J Wakeham W A July 6 1994 Standard reference data for the thermal conductivity of water Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data NIST 24 3 1377 1381 doi 10 1063 1 555963 Retrieved 25 May 2017 Millat Jurgen Dymond J H Nieto de Castro C A 2005 Transport properties of fluids their correlation prediction and estimation Cambridge New York IUPAC Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 02290 3 Sapphire Al2O3 Almaz Optics Retrieved 2012 08 15 Hahn David W Ozisik M Necati 2012 Heat conduction 3rd ed Hoboken N J Wiley p 614 ISBN 978 0 470 90293 6 a b Dai W et al 2017 Influence of gas pressure on the effective thermal conductivity of ceramic breeder pebble beds Fusion Engineering and Design 118 45 51 doi 10 1016 j fusengdes 2017 03 073 Wei Lanhua Kuo P K Thomas R L Anthony T R Banholzer W F 16 February 1993 Thermal conductivity of isotopically modified single crystal diamond Physical Review Letters 70 24 3764 3767 Bibcode 1993PhRvL 70 3764W doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 70 3764 PMID 10053956 Chen Ke Song Bai Ravichandran Navaneetha K Zheng Qiye Chen Xi Lee Hwijong Sun Haoran Li Sheng Gamage Geethal Amila Gamage Udalamatta Tian Fei Ding Zhiwei 2020 01 31 Ultrahigh thermal conductivity in isotope enriched cubic boron nitride Science 367 6477 555 559 Bibcode 2020Sci 367 555C doi 10 1126 science aaz6149 hdl 1721 1 127819 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 31919128 S2CID 210131908 see e g Balescu Radu 1975 Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics John Wiley amp Sons pp 674 675 ISBN 978 0 471 04600 4 Incropera Frank P DeWitt David P 1996 Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer 4th ed Wiley p 47 ISBN 0 471 30460 3 Chapman Sydney Cowling T G 1970 The Mathematical Theory of Non Uniform Gases 3rd ed Cambridge University Press pp 100 101 a b Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 p 275 Chapman amp Cowling p 167 a b Chapman amp Cowling p 247 Chapman amp Cowling pp 249 251 Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 p 276 Bird Stewart amp Lightfoot 2006 p 279 a b Klemens P G 1951 The Thermal Conductivity of Dielectric Solids at Low Temperatures Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A 208 1092 108 Bibcode 1951RSPSA 208 108K doi 10 1098 rspa 1951 0147 S2CID 136951686 Chang G K Jones R E 1962 Low Temperature Thermal Conductivity of Amorphous Solids Physical Review 126 6 2055 Bibcode 1962PhRv 126 2055C doi 10 1103 PhysRev 126 2055 Crawford Frank S 1968 Berkeley Physics Course Vol 3 Waves McGraw Hill p 215 ISBN 9780070048607 Pomeranchuk I 1941 Thermal conductivity of the paramagnetic dielectrics at low temperatures Journal of Physics USSR 4 357 ISSN 0368 3400 Zeller R C Pohl R O 1971 Thermal Conductivity and Specific Heat of Non crystalline Solids Physical Review B 4 6 2029 Bibcode 1971PhRvB 4 2029Z doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 4 2029 Love W F 1973 Low Temperature Thermal Brillouin Scattering in Fused Silica and Borosilicate Glass Physical Review Letters 31 13 822 Bibcode 1973PhRvL 31 822L doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 31 822 Zaitlin M P Anderson M C 1975 Phonon thermal transport in noncrystalline materials Physical Review B 12 10 4475 Bibcode 1975PhRvB 12 4475Z doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 12 4475 Zaitlin M P Scherr L M Anderson M C 1975 Boundary scattering of phonons in noncrystalline materials Physical Review B 12 10 4487 Bibcode 1975PhRvB 12 4487Z doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 12 4487 a b c d Pichanusakorn P Bandaru P 2010 Nanostructured thermoelectrics Materials Science and Engineering R Reports 67 2 4 19 63 doi 10 1016 j mser 2009 10 001 S2CID 46456426 Roufosse Micheline Klemens P G 1973 06 15 Thermal Conductivity of Complex Dielectric Crystals Physical Review B 7 12 5379 5386 Bibcode 1973PhRvB 7 5379R doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 7 5379 a b c d Ibach H Luth H 2009 Solid State Physics An Introduction to Principles of Materials Science Springer ISBN 978 3 540 93803 3 Puligheddu Marcello Galli Giulia 2020 05 11 Atomistic simulations of the thermal conductivity of liquids Physical Review Materials American Physical Society APS 4 5 053801 Bibcode 2020PhRvM 4e3801P doi 10 1103 physrevmaterials 4 053801 ISSN 2475 9953 OSTI 1631591 S2CID 219408529 Sharipov Felix Benites Victor J 2020 07 01 Transport coefficients of multi component mixtures of noble gases based on ab initio potentials Viscosity and thermal conductivity Physics of Fluids AIP Publishing 32 7 077104 arXiv 2006 08687 Bibcode 2020PhFl 32g7104S doi 10 1063 5 0016261 ISSN 1070 6631 S2CID 219708359 Huber M L Sykioti E A Assael M J Perkins R A 2016 Reference Correlation of the Thermal Conductivity of Carbon Dioxide from the Triple Point to 1100 K and up to 200 MPa Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data AIP Publishing 45 1 013102 Bibcode 2016JPCRD 45a3102H doi 10 1063 1 4940892 ISSN 0047 2689 PMC 4824315 PMID 27064300 Monogenidou S A Assael M J Huber M L 2018 Reference Correlation for the Thermal Conductivity of Ammonia from the Triple Point Temperature to 680 K and Pressures up to 80 MPa Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data AIP Publishing 47 4 043101 Bibcode 2018JPCRD 47d3101M doi 10 1063 1 5053087 ISSN 0047 2689 S2CID 105753612 Assael M J Mihailidou E K Huber M L Perkins R A 2012 Reference Correlation of the Thermal Conductivity of Benzene from the Triple Point to 725 K and up to 500 MPa Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data AIP Publishing 41 4 043102 Bibcode 2012JPCRD 41d3102A doi 10 1063 1 4755781 ISSN 0047 2689 NIST Reference Fluid Thermodynamic and Transport Properties Database REFPROP Version 10 NIST 2018 01 01 Retrieved 2021 12 23 Bell Ian H Wronski Jorrit Quoilin Sylvain Lemort Vincent 2014 01 27 Pure and Pseudo pure Fluid Thermophysical Property Evaluation and the Open Source Thermophysical Property Library CoolProp Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research American Chemical Society ACS 53 6 2498 2508 doi 10 1021 ie4033999 ISSN 0888 5885 PMC 3944605 PMID 24623957 Evans Denis J Morriss Gary P 2007 Statistical Mechanics of Nonequilibrium Liquids ANU Press ISBN 9781921313226 JSTOR j ctt24h99q Maginn Edward J Messerly Richard A Carlson Daniel J Roe Daniel R Elliott J Richard 2019 Best Practices for Computing Transport Properties 1 Self Diffusivity and Viscosity from Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics Article v1 0 Living Journal of Computational Molecular Science University of Colorado at Boulder 1 1 doi 10 33011 livecoms 1 1 6324 ISSN 2575 6524 S2CID 104357320 Sources edit Bird R B Stewart W E Lightfoot E N 2006 Transport Phenomena Transport Phenomena Vol 1 Wiley ISBN 978 0 470 11539 8 Further reading edit Undergraduate level texts engineering edit Bird R Byron Stewart Warren E Lightfoot Edwin N 2007 Transport Phenomena 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 470 11539 8 A standard modern reference Incropera Frank P DeWitt David P 1996 Fundamentals of heat and mass transfer 4th ed Wiley ISBN 0 471 30460 3 Bejan Adrian 1993 Heat Transfer John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 50290 1 Holman J P 1997 Heat Transfer 8th ed McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 844785 2 Callister William D 2003 Appendix B Materials Science and Engineering An Introduction John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 22471 5 Undergraduate level texts physics edit Halliday David Resnick Robert amp Walker Jearl 1997 Fundamentals of Physics 5th ed John Wiley and Sons New York ISBN 0 471 10558 9 An elementary treatment Daniel V Schroeder 1999 An Introduction to Thermal Physics Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 38027 9 A brief intermediate level treatment Reif F 1965 Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics McGraw Hill An advanced treatment Graduate level texts edit Balescu Radu 1975 Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 04600 4 Chapman Sydney Cowling T G 1970 The Mathematical Theory of Non Uniform Gases 3rd ed Cambridge University Press A very advanced but classic text on the theory of transport processes in gases Reid C R Prausnitz J M Poling B E Properties of gases and liquids IV edition Mc Graw Hill 1987 Srivastava G P 1990 The Physics of Phonons Adam Hilger IOP Publishing Ltd BristolExternal links editThermopedia THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY Contribution of Interionic Forces to the Thermal Conductivity of Dilute Electrolyte Solutions The Journal of Chemical Physics 41 3924 1964 The importance of Soil Thermal Conductivity for power companies Thermal Conductivity of Gas Mixtures in Chemical Equilibrium II The Journal of Chemical Physics 32 1005 1960 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thermal conductivity and resistivity amp oldid 1186038418, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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