The Anderson localization of phonons in disordered superlattices has been proposed as a route to suppress thermal conductivity beyond the limits imposed by conventional scattering mechanisms. A commonly used signature of phonon localization is the emergence of the nonmonotonic dependence of thermal conductivity κ on system length L, i.e., a κ-L maximum. However, such behavior has rarely been observed. In this work, we conduct extensive non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (NEMD) simulations, using the LAMMPS package, on both periodic superlattices (SLs) and aperiodic random multilayers (RMLs) constructed from Si/Ge and Lennard-Jones materials. By systematically varying acoustic contrast, interatomic bond strength, and average layer thickness, we examine the interplay between coherent and incoherent phonon transport in these systems. Our two-phonon model decomposition reveals that coherent phonons alone consistently exhibit a strong nonmonotonic κ-L. This localization signature is often masked by the diffusive, monotonically increasing contribution from incoherent phonons. We further extract the ballistic-limit mean free paths for both phonon types, and demonstrate that incoherent transport often dominates, thereby concealing localization effects. Our findings highlight the importance of decoupling coherent and incoherent phonon contributions in both simulations and experiments. This work provides new insights and design principles for achieving phonon Anderson localization in superlattice structures.
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Prominent phonon transmission across aperiodic superlattice through coherent mode-conversion
In both particle and wave descriptions of phonons, the dense, aperiodically arranged interfaces in aperiodic superlattices are expected to strongly attenuate thermal transport due to phonon-interface scattering or broken long-range coherence. However, non-trivial thermal conductivity is still observed in these structures. In this study, we reveal that incoherent modes propagating in the aperiodic superlattice can be converted, through interference, into coherent modes defined by an approximate dispersion relation. This conversion leads to high transmission across the aperiodic superlattice structure, which contains hundreds of interfaces, ultimately resulting in non-trivial thermal conductivity. Such incoherent-to-coherent mode-conversion behavior is extensively observed in periodic superlattices. This work suggests an effective strategy to manipulate the phonon dispersion relation through layer patterning or material choice, enabling precise control of phonon transmission across aperiodic superlattices.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2047109
- PAR ID:
- 10526039
- Publisher / Repository:
- AIP Publishing
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Applied Physics Letters
- Volume:
- 125
- Issue:
- 4
- ISSN:
- 0003-6951
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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