Engineering Copper Surface Microstructures for Dramatically Reduced Thermal Contact Resistance with Carbon Nanotubes: Insights from Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Abstract
Abstract:The efficient dissipation of heat from integrated circuits is critically limited by high interface thermal resistance (ITR) at material junctions. Vertically aligned carbon nanotube (VACNT) arrays offer a promising solution but face challenges in integration and inherently high ITR with metal heat spreaders like copper (Cu). This study employs molecular dynamics simulations to systematically investigate the regulatory mechanism for Cu-CNT ITR. By designing and analyzing 24 distinct interfacial structures, it is found that ITR can be either significantly reduced or unexpectedly increased, governed by the interplay between geometric contact, vibrational density of states (VDOS) overlap, and phonon participation ratio (PPR). Key findings reveal that negative-height nanopillars achieve up to a 75% reduction in ITR dominated by enhanced sidewall contact. Positive-height pillars generally reduce ITR via enhanced VDOS overlap in the 0-7 THz range, but an anomalous increase occurs at low heights due to PPR collapse and strong localization. Similarly, low-density atomic wells reduce ITR by 27.6-42.8%, whereas high-density deep atomic wells increase ITR drastically due to phonon channel collapse in the 3-5 THz range. This work provides fundamental insights and a novel strategy for designing ultra-low-resistance thermal interfaces, facilitating the adoption of VACNT-based thermal management solutions for high-heat-flux applications.
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