In the past two decades, extensive research has been conducted towards developing nanomaterials with superior transport properties, such as heat conductivity and mass diffusivity, for applications in various industries including, but not limited to,energy storage and microelectronics. In terms of modeling and simulation, along-standing difficulty lies in the separation of temporal and spatial scales. Indeed, many transport phenomena in nanomaterials are characterized by slow kinetic processes with time scale of the order of seconds, hours, or even years, far beyond the time windows of existing simulation technologies such as molecular dynamics (MD)and Monte Carlo (MC) methods. We have developed a novel deformation-diffusion coupled computational framework that allows long-term simulation of such slow processes, while at the same time maintains a strictly atomistic description of the material. Ournon-equilibrium statistical thermo-dynamics model includes discrete kinetic laws, which govern mass diffusion and head conductionion at atomic scale. In this work, we explore the capabilities and performance of this computational framework through its application to heat conduction problems.
Conference report
Inglés
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Matemàtiques i estadística::Anàlisi numèrica::Mètodes en elements finits; Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Enginyeria dels materials::Materials funcionals::Materials elèctrics i electrònics; Finite element method; Nanostructured materials--Electric properties; Meanfield theory; non-equilibrium statistical thermodynamics; slow kinetic processes; thermal conductivity; semiconductor nanowire; Elements finits, Mètode dels; Materials nanoestructurals
CIMNE
Open Access
Congressos [11188]