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The solid-state neck growth mechanisms in low energy laser sintering of gold nanoparticles: A molecular dynamics simulation study

Cited 98 time in Web of Science Cited 105 time in Scopus
Authors

Pan, Heng; Ko, Seung H.; Grigoropoulos, Costas P.

Issue Date
2008-09
Publisher
ASME
Citation
Journal of Heat Transfer, Vol.130 No.9, p. 092404
Abstract
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were employed to investigate the mechanism and kinetics of the solid-state sintering of two crystalline gold nanoparticles (4.4-10.0 nm) induced by low energy laser heating. At low temperature (300 K), sintering can occur between two bare nanoparticles by elastic and plastic deformation driven by strong local potential gradients. This initial neck growth occurs very fast (< 150 ps), and is therefore essentially insensitive to laser irradiation. This paper focuses on the subsequent longer time scale intermediate neck growth process induced by laser heating. The classical diffusion based neck growth model is modified to predict the time resolved neck growth during continuous heating with the diffusion coefficients and surface tension extracted from MD simulation. The diffusion model underestimates the neck growth rate for smaller particles (5.4 nm) while satisfactory agreement is obtained for larger particles (10 nm). The deviation is due to the ultrafine size effect for particles below 10 nm. Various possible mechanisms were identified and discussed.
ISSN
0022-1481
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/208346
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2943303
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Related Researcher

  • College of Engineering
  • Department of Mechanical Engineering
Research Area Laser Assisted Patterning, Liquid Crystal Elastomer, Stretchable Electronics, 로보틱스, 스마트 제조, 열공학

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