Thermal boundary resistance

E. T. Swartz and R. O. Pohl
Rev. Mod. Phys. 61, 605 – Published 1 July 1989
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Abstract

The thermal boundary resistance present at interfaces between helium and solids (Kapitza resistance) and the thermal boundary resistance at interfaces between two solids are discussed for temperatures above 0.1 K. The apparent qualitative differences in the behavior of the boundary resistance at these two types of interfaces can be understood within the context of two limiting models of the boundary resistance, the acoustic mismatch model, which assumes no scattering, and the diffuse mismatch model, which assumes that all phonons incident on the interface will scatter. If the acoustic impedances of the two media in contact are very different, as is the case for helium (liquid or solid) in contact with a solid, then phonon scattering at the interface will reduce the boundary resistance. In the limiting case of diffuse mismatch, this reduction is typically over 2 orders of magnitude. Phonons are very sensitive to surface defects, and therefore the Kapitza resistance is very sensitive to the condition of the interface. For typical solid-solid interfaces, at which the acoustic impedances are less different, the influence of diffuse scattering is relatively small; even for the two limiting cases of acoustic mismatch and diffuse mismatch the predicted boundary resistances differ by very little (≲ 30%). Consequently, the experimentally determined values are expected to be rather insensitive to the condition of the interface, in agreement with recent observations. Subsurface (bulk) disorder and imperfect physical contact between the solids play far more important roles and led to the irreproducibilities observed in the early measurements of the solid-solid thermal boundary resistance.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.61.605

    ©1989 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    E. T. Swartz

    • RMC-Cryosystems, Tucson, Arizona 85745

    R. O. Pohl

    • Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-2501

    Comments & Replies

    Transport of phonons into diffusive media

    W. E. Bron, J. L. Patel, and W. L. Schaich
    Phys. Rev. B 20, 5394 (1979)

    Original Article

    Phonon spectroscopy. I. Spectral distribution of a phonon pulse

    W. E. Bron and W. Grill
    Phys. Rev. B 16, 5303 (1977)

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    Issue

    Vol. 61, Iss. 3 — July - September 1989

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