Abstract

The thermal conductance of a one-dimensional classical inertial Heisenberg model of linear size L is computed, considering the first and last particles in thermal contact with heat baths at higher and lower temperatures, Th and Tl (Th>Tl), respectively. These particles at the extremities of the chain are subjected to standard Langevin dynamics, whereas all remaining rotators (i=2,⋯,L-1) interact by means of nearest-neighbor ferromagnetic couplings and evolve in time following their own equations of motion, being investigated numerically through molecular-dynamics numerical simulations. Fourier's law for the heat flux is verified numerically, with the thermal conductivity becoming independent of the lattice size in the limit L→∞, scaling with the temperature, as κ(T)∼T-2.25, where T=(Th+Tl)/2. Moreover, the thermal conductance, σ(L,T)≡κ(T)/L, is well-fitted by a function, which is typical of nonextensive statistical mechanics, according to σ(L,T)=Aexpq(-Bxη), where A and B are constants, x=L0.475T, q=2.28±0.04, and η=2.88±0.04.

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