## Measurements were made of the thermal expansivitv (22"-1000ยฐC) and the thermal conductivity (22"-800ยฐC) of isotropic pyrocarbons deposited in fluidized beds and containing up to 34 wt% silicon in the form of @-silicon carbide particles. The thermal expansivity of the pure carbons was proportion
Thermal conductivity of pure monoisotopic silicon
โ Scribed by P. G. Klemens
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 377 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0195-928X
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โฆ Synopsis
The thermal conductivity of pure monoisotopic silicon is estimated by two methods, which give similar results. One estimate, based on the observed thermal conductivity of monoisotopic germanium, yields a maximum of 66 W, cm-1. K-1 at 22 K. The other estimate, based on measurements of natural silicon and on the theoretical isotope scattering rate, yields 75 W 9 cmi. K-i at 22 K, an increase of only 45% over the natural crystal. These values are for crystals of approximately 0.5 cm diameter; smaller crystals yield lower values of the maximum conductivity and smaller isotope effects. Silicon cooled to liquid hydrogen temperature seems promising for high-irradiance laser mirrors. The small gain obtained by using monoisotopic silicon would be substantially greater in cases when the generated phonon distribution is athermal and weighted to higher frequencies. The effective heat transport could then be increased by as much as a factor 60 through the use of rnonoisotopic silicon.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The thermal conductivity, K, of single crystals of NaF was measured at low temperatures. In the best crystal, Kmax was ~ 30 watts/cm-deg at a temperature Tmax 17ยฐK. This crystal exhibited the exponential behavior expected at T ~ Tmax for crystals free of isotope scattering. In comparing K (from 3 ยฐ