Ultrafast electron diffuse scattering as a tool for studying phonon transport: Phonon hydrodynamics and second sound oscillations

Author:

Kremeyer Laurenz1ORCID,Britt Tristan L.1ORCID,Siwick Bradley J.12,Huberman Samuel C.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, Center for the Physics of Materials, McGill University 1 , Montreal, Quebec H3A 2T8, Canada

2. Department of Chemistry, McGill University 2 , Montreal, Quebec H3A 0B8, Canada

3. Department of Chemical Engineering, McGill University 3 , Montreal, Quebec H3A 0C5, Canada

Abstract

Hydrodynamic phonon transport phenomena, like second sound, have been observed in liquid helium more than 50 years ago. More recently second sound has been observed in graphite at over 200 K using transient thermal grating (TG) techniques. In this work, we explore signatures of phonon hydrodynamic transport and second sound oscillations in ultrafast electron diffuse scattering patterns, which can provide time, momentum, and branch resolved information on the state-of-excitation of the phonon system beyond that available through TG experiments. We use the density functional theory and solve the Boltzmann transport equation to determine time-resolved non-equilibrium phonon populations and model phonon transport in graphite. This model also provides the information necessary to calculate the time evolution of one-phonon structure factors and diffuse scattering patterns during thermal transport covering ballistic, diffusive, and hydrodynamic regimes where the effect of a second sound oscillation on the phonon distribution is observed. Direct measurements of how the phonon distribution varies in time and space in various thermal transport regimes should yield new insights into the fundamental physics of the underlying processes.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et technologies

Canada Foundation for Innovation

National Research Council Canada

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Reference28 articles.

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