Enhancement and reduction of one-dimensional heat conduction with correlated mass disorder
Zhun-Yong Ong, Gang Zhang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that short-range mass correlations in 1D disordered lattices can significantly alter heat conduction, enhancing high-frequency phonon transmission while increasing low-frequency localization, leading to controllable thermal properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel understanding of how spatial mass correlations affect phonon transport and heat conduction in 1D disordered systems, revealing new mechanisms for thermal control.
Findings
High-frequency phonon transmittance is enhanced by mass correlation.
Low-frequency phonons become more localized with correlation.
Thermal resistance scales as the square root of correlation length.
Abstract
Short-range order in strongly disordered structures plays an important role in their heat conduction property. Using numerical and analytical methods, we show that short-range spatial correlation (with a correlation length of ) in the mass distribution of the one-dimensional (1D) alloy-like random binary lattice leads to a dramatic enhancement of the high-frequency phonon transmittance but also increases the low-frequency phonon opacity. High-frequency semi-extended states are formed while low-frequency modes become more localized. This results in ballistic heat conduction at finite lengths but also paradoxically higher thermal resistance that scale as in the limit. We identify an emergent crossover length () below which the onset of thermal transparency appears. The crossover length is linearly dependent on but is two orders…
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