Nanoscale Thermal Physics: Seebeck Effect and Nanoscale Friction
2016.08.29 21:05
장소 | E6-2(1st fl.), #1323 |
---|---|
일시 | Sep. 02(Fri) 2:30 PM |
연사 | Dr. Yong-Hyun Kim,Graduate School of Nanoscience and Technology, KAIST |
Nanoscale Thermal Physics: Seebeck Effect and Nanoscale Friction
Sep. 02(Fri) 2:30 PM, E6-2(1st fl.), #1323
Dr. Yong-Hyun Kim,Graduate School of Nanoscience and Technology, KAIST
Abstract:
Heat, a measure of entropy, is largely perceived to be diffusive and transported incoherently by charge carriers (electrons and holes) and lattice vibrations (phonons) in a material. Because heat can be carried by many different (quasi-)particles, it is generally hard to spatially localize the transport of the thermal energy. Heat transport is thus considered to be a challenging means of the local probing of a material and of its electronic states. Recently, we have shown that coherent electron and heat transport through a point-like contact in the atomic force microscope set-up at the ultra-high vacuum condition produces an atomic Seebeck effect, which represents the novel imaging principle of surface wave functions with atomic resolution. The heat-based scanning Seebeck microscopy clearly contrasts to the vacuum tunneling-based scanning tunneling microscopy, a hitherto golden standard of imaging surface wave functions. We have found that the coherent transmission probabilities of electron and phonon across the tip-sample junction are equally important for the imaging capability of the scanning Seebeck microscope. Very recently, we have reported that abnormally enhanced nanoscale friction on ice-trapped graphene surface could be understood in terms of flexural phonon couplings between graphene and substrate (e.g. mica). Also, we have found that energetic tunneling electrons in scanning tunneling microscopy can cause chemical reactions at the single molecule level by locally exciting phonon modes of molecules (or nanoscale heating) under the tip through the inelastic electron-phonon scattering. In this talk, I will discuss how we theoretically explore nanoscale thermal physics including thermoelectric imaging, nanoscale friction, and single molecule chemical reaction, specifically in the setup of scanning probe microscopy.
Contact: Sung Jae Cho, Physics Dept., (sungjae.cho@kaist.ac.kr)
댓글 0
번호 | 일시 | 장소 | 연사 | 제목 |
---|---|---|---|---|
공지 | 2019/09/18 - 12/5 | Seminar Room #1323 | Prof. David Schuster and etc. | Fall 2019: Physics Seminar Serises |
공지 | 2019/09/02 - 12/09 | Seminar Room 1501 | 이호성 박사 (한국표준과학연구원) and etc. | Fall 2019: Physics Colloquium |
95 | 2016/09/29-12/13 | E6-2, #1323 | Sangyoon Han 외 |
2016 Fall, Physics Seminar Serises
![]() |
94 | Sep. 29th(Thu), 4PM | E6-2 #1323 (1st floor) | Dr. Sangyoon Han, Department of Physics, KAIST | Large-scale Silicon Photonic MEMS Switches |
93 | Sep. 29 (Thu), 4:00 PM | E6-2. #2501(2nd fl.) | Dr. Minu Kim, Institute for Basic Science, Seoul National University | Exploring the phase diagram of BaBiO3: epic voyage of just another bad trip? |
92 | Sep. 22, 2016(Thu), 3:30 PM | #1323(E6-2, 1st fl.) | Dr. Haiyang Yan (Institute of Nuclear Physics and Chemistry) | Polarized 3He, Polarized Neutrons and New Interactions beyond the Standard Model |
91 | 4pm, Sep. 21 (Wed. | E6-2. #2502(2nd fl.) | Dr. Henrik Johannesson , University of Gothenburg (Sweden) and Beijing Computational Science Research Center (China) | Entanglement probe of two-impurity Kondo physics |
90 | Sep. 22, 2016(Thu), 3:30 PM | #1323(E6-2, 1st fl.) | Dr. Haiyang Yan (Institute of Nuclear Physics and Chemistry) | Polarized 3He, Polarized Neutrons and New Interactions beyond the Standard Model |
89 | 2016/09/05-12/12 4PM | Natual Scien Bldg.(E6)m #1501 | Yeong Kwan Kim 외 |
Physics Colloquium : 2016 Fall
![]() |
88 | Sep. 02(Fri) 4:00 PM | E6-2(1st fl) #1323 | Dr. Yong-Joo Doh, Department of Physics and Photon Science, GIST | Quantum Electrical Transport in Topological Insulator Nanowires |
» | Sep. 02(Fri) 2:30 PM | E6-2(1st fl.), #1323 | Dr. Yong-Hyun Kim,Graduate School of Nanoscience and Technology, KAIST | Nanoscale Thermal Physics: Seebeck Effect and Nanoscale Friction |
86 | Aug. 4, 2016 (Thu.), 2:30 pm | KAIST Natural Science Building (E6-5), EDU 3.0 Room(1st fl.) | Prof. Argyris Nicolaidis | Relational Logic (with applications to Quantum Mechanics, String Theory, Cosmology, Neutrino Oscillations, Statistical Mechanics) |
85 | Jul. 28 (Thu.) 4PM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Prof. Johannes Pollanen, Jerry Cowen Chair of Experimental Physics at Michigan State University | Low Dimensional Electrons: On the Road to Hybrid Quantum Systems |
84 | Jul. 08 (Fri.) 2PM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Junhyun Lee, Harvard University | Electronic quasiparticles in the quantum dimer model |
83 | Jul. 07 (Thu.) 2PM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Eun Ah Kim, CORNELL UNIV. | Let there be topological superconductors |
82 | Jul. 08 (Fri.) 11:00 AM | #1323(E6-2. 1st fl.) | Dr. Michael Lawler(Binghampton Univ. / Cornell Univ.) | Isostatic magnetism |
81 | Jun. 16 (Thu) 4PM | #1323(E6-2, 1st fl.) | Hyochul Kim, Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology | Quantum information processing using quantum dots and photonic crystal cavities |
80 | Jun. 14 (Tue) 4PM | Seminar Room (#2502, 2nd fl.) | Young-Sik Ra, Université Pierre et Marie Curie | Photonic quantum network based on multimode squeezed vacuums and single-photon subtraction |
79 | June 14, 2016 (Tue) 3PM | #1323 (E6-2 1st fl.) | Prof. Seungyong Hahn, Florida State University | No-Insulation High Temperature Superconductor Magnet Technology for Compact, Reliable, and Low-Cost High Field DC Magnets |
78 | Jun 1 (Wed) 4 PM | #1323(E6-2 1st fl.) | Kil-Byoung Chai, Caltech | Laboratory experiments relevant to mesospheric clouds, Saturn’s rings & astrophysical jets |
77 | May 31 (Tue.) 4 PM | #1323(E6-2, 1st fl.) | Dr. Kimin Kim, KAIST | Understanding 3D tokamak physics towards advanced control of toroidal plasma |
76 | Jun. 1(Wed) 10:30 AM | BK21 Conference Room (#1318, E6-2) | Dr. Noriaki Horiuchi, Editor, Nature Photonics | Welcome to Nature Photonics |