3ω thermal characterization of suspended fine wires across continuum to free-molecular gas regimes

ORAL

Abstract

The 3ω method is widely used to measure the thermal conductivity and the specific heat of wires and thin films. These measurements are typically performed under high vacuum conditions, which justify the use of heat transfer models that exclude thermal losses to a surrounding fluid. Here, we study the effect of thermal conduction from a joule-heated wire to a surrounding gas on pressure-dependent 3ω measurements, and show how a 1D heat transfer model may be used to reliably determine the wire's thermal properties. We derive a full analytical solution of the 1D heat transfer equation with finite heat transfer coefficient h and validate it experimentally using a 16 μm diameter platinum wire in air across pressures from 10^−5 to 10^3 mbar. We introduce a model for heat transfer between the wire and the surrounding gas based on kinetic gas theory that accurately describes the data across continuum to free-molecular gas regimes, with h varying from near-zero in high vacuum to ∼700 W/(m^2·K) at atmospheric pressure. We show that use of a validated h(p) model allows extracting both thermal conductivity κ and volumetric heat capacity ρcp, whereas volumetric heat capacity can be extracted even without invoking a specific h(p) model. Our approach facilitates the characterization of fine wires with moderate to low thermal conductivities and may enable accurate thermal measurements of suspended wires with diameters on the nanometer scale.

*This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 2341781. J. G. acknowledges support from the Brown University Summer/Semester Projects for Research, Internship, and Teaching (SPRINT) program through both an Undergraduate Teaching and Research Awards (UTRA) fellowship as well as an Advanced Undergraduate Research Fellowship. U. D. also acknowledges support from the Brown University SPRINT program through an UTRA fellowship.

Presenters

  • Chuyue Peng

    • Brown University

Authors

  • Chuyue Peng

    • Brown University
  • Joshua Ginzburg

    • Brown University
  • Uri Dickman

    • UC Santa Barbara
  • Jacob Jonathan Bair

    • Brown University
  • Matthias Kuehne

    • Brown University