Abstract

In this study we used a nonequilibrium simulation method to investigate the temperature dependent divergence of thermal conductivity in a one-dimensional momentum conserving system with an asymmetric double well nearest-neighbor interaction potential. We show that across all temperatures thermal conductivity exhibits power-law divergence with the chain length and the value of the divergence exponent (α) depends on the temperature of the system. At low and high temperatures α reaches close to ∼0.5 and ∼0.33, respectively. Whereas in the intermediate temperature the divergence of thermal conductivity with the chain length saturates with α∼0.07. Subsequent analysis showed that the estimated value of α in the intermediate temperature may not have reached its thermodynamic limit. Further calculations of local α revealed that its approach towards the thermodynamic limit is crucially dependent on the temperature of the system. At low and high temperatures local α reaches its thermodynamic limits in shorter chain lengths. On the contrary, in the case of intermediate temperature its progress towards the asymptotic limit is nonmonotonic.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call