DocumentCode :
3123559
Title :
Specific heat in nanostructures by quantum mechanics
Author :
Prevenslik, Thomas
Author_Institution :
QED Radiations, Discovery Bay, Hong Kong, China
fYear :
2010
fDate :
19-22 Dec. 2010
Firstpage :
117
Lastpage :
122
Abstract :
Specific heat is thought to be an intensive thermophysical property of a material independent of the dimensions of the body. Today, specific heat at the nanoscale is assumed the same as that of macroscopic bodies. In effect, the classical equipartition theorem of statistical mechanics is assumed at the nanoscale allowing atoms to have heat capacity at all thermal wavelengths. Therefore, classical physics allows submicron wavelengths that can “fit inside” nanostructures to conserve electromagnetic (EM) energy by an increase in temperature. Quantum mechanics (QM) also allows the atom to have heat capacity at submicron wavelength, but only at high temperature. At ambient temperature, the high frequency modes at submicron wavelengths are therefore “frozen out” leaving nanostructures without the heat capacity to increase in temperature to conserve absorbed EM energy. By QM, specific heat vanishes at the nanoscale. Conservation may only proceed by the quantum electrodynamics (QED) induced creation of photons within the nanostructure at a frequency equal to its fundamental EM resonance. Subsequently, QED radiation leaks to the surroundings. Specific heat at the nanoscale is therefore not an intensive property of a material, but rather an extensive property depending on the body dimensions.
Keywords :
nanostructured materials; quantum electrodynamics; quantum theory; specific heat; statistical mechanics; QED radiation leaks; classical equipartition theorem; electromagnetic energy; fundamental EM resonance; heat capacity; macroscopic bodies; nanostructures; quantum electrodynamics; quantum mechanics; specific heat; statistical mechanics; Conductivity; Heat transfer; Heating; Nanoscale devices; Nanostructures; Oscillators; Phonons;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Thermal Issues in Emerging Technologies Theory and Applications (ThETA), 2010 3rd International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Cairo
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-268-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/THETA.2010.5766387
Filename :
5766387
Link To Document :
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