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1 \documentclass[11pt]{article}
2 \usepackage{amsmath}
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28
29 \begin{document}
30
31 \title{ENTER TITLE HERE}
32
33 \author{Shenyu Kuang and J. Daniel
34 Gezelter\footnote{Corresponding author. \ Electronic mail: gezelter@nd.edu} \\
35 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,\\
36 University of Notre Dame\\
37 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
38
39 \date{\today}
40
41 \maketitle
42
43 \begin{doublespace}
44
45 \begin{abstract}
46 REPLACE ABSTRACT HERE
47 With the Non-Isotropic Velocity Scaling (NIVS) approach to Reverse
48 Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics (RNEMD) it is possible to impose
49 an unphysical thermal flux between different regions of
50 inhomogeneous systems such as solid / liquid interfaces. We have
51 applied NIVS to compute the interfacial thermal conductance at a
52 metal / organic solvent interface that has been chemically capped by
53 butanethiol molecules. Our calculations suggest that coupling
54 between the metal and liquid phases is enhanced by the capping
55 agents, leading to a greatly enhanced conductivity at the interface.
56 Specifically, the chemical bond between the metal and the capping
57 agent introduces a vibrational overlap that is not present without
58 the capping agent, and the overlap between the vibrational spectra
59 (metal to cap, cap to solvent) provides a mechanism for rapid
60 thermal transport across the interface. Our calculations also
61 suggest that this is a non-monotonic function of the fractional
62 coverage of the surface, as moderate coverages allow diffusive heat
63 transport of solvent molecules that have been in close contact with
64 the capping agent.
65
66 \end{abstract}
67
68 \newpage
69
70 %\narrowtext
71
72 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
73 % BODY OF TEXT
74 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
75
76 \section{Introduction}
77 [REFINE LATER, ADD MORE REF.S]
78 Imposed-flux methods in Molecular Dynamics (MD)
79 simulations\cite{MullerPlathe:1997xw} can establish steady state
80 systems with a set applied flux vs a corresponding gradient that can
81 be measured. These methods does not need many trajectories to provide
82 information of transport properties of a given system. Thus, they are
83 utilized in computing thermal and mechanical transfer of homogeneous
84 or bulk systems as well as heterogeneous systems such as liquid-solid
85 interfaces.\cite{kuang:AuThl}
86
87 The Reverse Non-Equilibrium MD (RNEMD) methods adopt constraints that
88 satisfy linear momentum and total energy conservation of a system when
89 imposing fluxes in a simulation. Thus they are compatible with various
90 ensembles, including the micro-canonical (NVE) ensemble, without the
91 need of an external thermostat. The original approaches by
92 M\"{u}ller-Plathe {\it et
93 al.}\cite{MullerPlathe:1997xw,ISI:000080382700030} utilize simple
94 momentum swapping for generating energy/momentum fluxes, which is also
95 compatible with particles of different identities. Although simple to
96 implement in a simulation, this approach can create nonthermal
97 velocity distributions, as discovered by Tenney and
98 Maginn\cite{Maginn:2010}. Furthermore, this approach to kinetic energy
99 transfer between particles of different identities is less efficient
100 when the mass difference between the particles becomes significant,
101 which also limits its application on heterogeneous interfacial
102 systems.
103
104 Recently, we developed a different approach, using Non-Isotropic
105 Velocity Scaling (NIVS) \cite{kuang:164101} algorithm to impose
106 fluxes. Compared to the momentum swapping move, it scales the velocity
107 vectors in two separate regions of a simulated system with respective
108 diagonal scaling matrices. These matrices are determined by solving a
109 set of equations including linear momentum and kinetic energy
110 conservation constraints and target flux satisfaction. This method is
111 able to effectively impose a wide range of kinetic energy fluxes
112 without obvious perturbation to the velocity distributions of the
113 simulated systems, regardless of the presence of heterogeneous
114 interfaces. We have successfully applied this approach in studying the
115 interfacial thermal conductance at metal-solvent
116 interfaces.\cite{kuang:AuThl}
117
118 However, the NIVS approach limits its application in imposing momentum
119 fluxes. Temperature anisotropy can happen under high momentum fluxes,
120 due to the nature of the algorithm. Thus, combining thermal and
121 momentum flux is also difficult to implement with this
122 approach. However, such combination may provide a means to simulate
123 thermal/momentum gradient coupled processes such as freeze
124 desalination. Therefore, developing novel approaches to extend the
125 application of imposed-flux method is desired.
126
127 In this paper, we improve the NIVS method and propose a novel approach
128 to impose fluxes. This approach separate the means of applying
129 momentum and thermal flux with operations in one time step and thus is
130 able to simutaneously impose thermal and momentum flux. Furthermore,
131 the approach retains desirable features of previous RNEMD approaches
132 and is simpler to implement compared to the NIVS method. In what
133 follows, we first present the method to implement the method in a
134 simulation. Then we compare the method on bulk fluids to previous
135 methods. Also, interfacial frictions are computed for a series of
136 interfaces.
137
138 \section{Methodology}
139 Similar to the NIVS methodology,\cite{kuang:164101} we consider a
140 periodic system divided into a series of slabs along a certain axis
141 (e.g. $z$). The unphysical thermal and/or momentum flux is designated
142 from the center slab to one of the end slabs, and thus the center slab
143 would have a lower temperature than the end slab (unless the thermal
144 flux is negative). Therefore, the center slab is denoted as ``$c$''
145 while the end slab as ``$h$''.
146
147 To impose these fluxes, we periodically apply separate operations to
148 velocities of particles {$i$} within the center slab and of particles
149 {$j$} within the end slab:
150 \begin{eqnarray}
151 \vec{v}_i & \leftarrow & c\cdot\left(\vec{v}_i - \langle\vec{v}_c
152 \rangle\right) + \left(\langle\vec{v}_c\rangle + \vec{a}_c\right) \\
153 \vec{v}_j & \leftarrow & h\cdot\left(\vec{v}_j - \langle\vec{v}_h
154 \rangle\right) + \left(\langle\vec{v}_h\rangle + \vec{a}_h\right)
155 \end{eqnarray}
156 where $\langle\vec{v}_c\rangle$ and $\langle\vec{v}_h\rangle$ denotes
157 the instantaneous bulk velocity of slabs $c$ and $h$ respectively
158 before an operation occurs. When a momentum flux $\vec{j}_z(\vec{p})$
159 presents, these bulk velocities would have a corresponding change
160 ($\vec{a}_c$ and $\vec{a}_h$ respectively) according to Newton's
161 second law:
162 \begin{eqnarray}
163 M_c \vec{a}_c & = & -\vec{j}_z(\vec{p}) \Delta t \\
164 M_h \vec{a}_h & = & \vec{j}_z(\vec{p}) \Delta t
165 \end{eqnarray}
166 where
167 \begin{eqnarray}
168 M_c & = & \sum_{i = 1}^{N_c} m_i \\
169 M_h & = & \sum_{j = 1}^{N_h} m_j
170 \end{eqnarray}
171 and $\Delta t$ is the interval between two operations.
172
173 The above operations conserve the linear momentum of a periodic
174 system. To satisfy total energy conservation as well as to impose a
175 thermal flux $J_z$, one would have
176 [SUPPORT INFO MIGHT BE NECESSARY TO PUT EXTRA MATH IN]
177 \begin{eqnarray}
178 K_c - J_z\Delta t & = & c^2 (K_c - \frac{1}{2}M_c \langle\vec{v}_c
179 \rangle^2) + \frac{1}{2}M_c (\langle \vec{v}_c \rangle + \vec{a}_c)^2 \\
180 K_h + J_z\Delta t & = & h^2 (K_h - \frac{1}{2}M_h \langle\vec{v}_h
181 \rangle^2) + \frac{1}{2}M_h (\langle \vec{v}_h \rangle + \vec{a}_h)^2
182 \end{eqnarray}
183 where $K_c$ and $K_h$ denotes translational kinetic energy of slabs
184 $c$ and $h$ respectively before an operation occurs. These
185 translational kinetic energy conservation equations are sufficient to
186 ensure total energy conservation, as the operations applied do not
187 change the potential energy of a system, given that the potential
188 energy does not depend on particle velocity.
189
190 The above sets of equations are sufficient to determine the velocity
191 scaling coefficients ($c$ and $h$) as well as $\vec{a}_c$ and
192 $\vec{a}_h$. Note that two roots of $c$ and $h$ exist
193 respectively. However, to avoid dramatic perturbations to a system,
194 the positive roots (which are closer to 1) are chosen. Figure
195 \ref{method} illustrates the implementation of this algorithm in an
196 individual step.
197
198 \begin{figure}
199 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{method}
200 \caption{Illustration of the implementation of the algorithm in a
201 single step. Starting from an ideal velocity distribution, the
202 transformation is used to apply both thermal and momentum flux from
203 the ``c'' slab to the ``h'' slab. As the figure shows, the thermal
204 distributions preserve after this operation.}
205 \label{method}
206 \end{figure}
207
208 By implementing these operations at a certain frequency, a steady
209 thermal and/or momentum flux can be applied and the corresponding
210 temperature and/or momentum gradients can be established.
211
212 This approach is more computationaly efficient compared to the
213 previous NIVS method, in that only quadratic equations are involved,
214 while the NIVS method needs to solve a quartic equations. Furthermore,
215 the method implements isotropic scaling of velocities in respective
216 slabs, unlike the NIVS, where an extra criteria function is necessary
217 to choose a set of coefficients that performs the most isotropic
218 scaling. More importantly, separating the momentum flux imposing from
219 velocity scaling avoids the underlying cause that NIVS produced
220 thermal anisotropy when applying a momentum flux.
221 %NEW METHOD DOESN'T CAUSE UNDESIRED CONCOMITENT MOMENTUM FLUX WHEN
222 %IMPOSING A THERMAL FLUX
223
224 The advantages of the approach over the original momentum swapping
225 approach lies in its nature to preserve a Gaussian
226 distribution. Because the momentum swapping tends to render a
227 nonthermal distribution, when the imposed flux is relatively large,
228 diffusion of the neighboring slabs could no longer remedy this effect,
229 and nonthermal distributions would be observed. Results in later
230 section will illustrate this effect.
231 %NEW METHOD (AND NIVS) HAVE LESS PERTURBATION THAN MOMENTUM SWAPPING
232
233 \section{Computational Details}
234 The algorithm has been implemented in our MD simulation code,
235 OpenMD\cite{Meineke:2005gd,openmd}. We compare the method with
236 previous RNEMD methods or equilibrium MD methods in homogeneous fluids
237 (Lennard-Jones and SPC/E water). And taking advantage of the method,
238 we simulate the interfacial friction of different heterogeneous
239 interfaces (gold-organic solvent and gold-SPC/E water and ice-liquid
240 water).
241
242 \subsection{Simulation Protocols}
243 The systems to be investigated are set up in a orthorhombic simulation
244 cell with periodic boundary conditions in all three dimensions. The
245 $z$ axis of these cells were longer and was used as the gradient axis
246 of temperature and/or momentum. Thus the cells were divided into $N$
247 slabs along this axis, with various $N$ depending on individual
248 system. The $x$ and $y$ axis were usually of the same length in
249 homogeneous systems or close to each other where interfaces
250 presents. In all cases, before introducing a nonequilibrium method to
251 establish steady thermal and/or momentum gradients for further
252 measurements and calculations, canonical ensemble with a Nos\'e-Hoover
253 thermostat\cite{hoover85} and microcanonical ensemble equilibrations
254 were used to prepare systems ready for data
255 collections. Isobaric-isothermal equilibrations are performed before
256 this for SPC/E water systems to reach normal pressure (1 bar), while
257 similar equilibrations are used for interfacial systems to relax the
258 surface tensions.
259
260 While homogeneous fluid systems can be set up with random
261 configurations, our interfacial systems needs extra steps to ensure
262 the interfaces be established properly for computations.
263 [AU(THIOL)ORGANIC SOLVENTS: REFER TO JPCC]
264 [ICE-WATER REFER TO OTHER REF.S]
265
266 Metal slabs of 6 or 11 layers of Au atoms were first equilibrated
267 under atmospheric pressure (1 atm) and 200K. After equilibration,
268 butanethiol capping agents were placed at three-fold hollow sites on
269 the Au(111) surfaces. These sites are either {\it fcc} or {\it
270 hcp} sites, although Hase {\it et al.} found that they are
271 equivalent in a heat transfer process,\cite{hase:2010} so we did not
272 distinguish between these sites in our study. The maximum butanethiol
273 capacity on Au surface is $1/3$ of the total number of surface Au
274 atoms, and the packing forms a $(\sqrt{3}\times\sqrt{3})R30^\circ$
275 structure\cite{doi:10.1021/ja00008a001,doi:10.1021/cr9801317}. A
276 series of lower coverages was also prepared by eliminating
277 butanethiols from the higher coverage surface in a regular manner. The
278 lower coverages were prepared in order to study the relation between
279 coverage and interfacial conductance.
280
281 The capping agent molecules were allowed to migrate during the
282 simulations. They distributed themselves uniformly and sampled a
283 number of three-fold sites throughout out study. Therefore, the
284 initial configuration does not noticeably affect the sampling of a
285 variety of configurations of the same coverage, and the final
286 conductance measurement would be an average effect of these
287 configurations explored in the simulations.
288
289 After the modified Au-butanethiol surface systems were equilibrated in
290 the canonical (NVT) ensemble, organic solvent molecules were packed in
291 the previously empty part of the simulation cells.\cite{packmol} Two
292 solvents were investigated, one which has little vibrational overlap
293 with the alkanethiol and which has a planar shape (toluene), and one
294 which has similar vibrational frequencies to the capping agent and
295 chain-like shape ({\it n}-hexane).
296
297 The simulation cells were not particularly extensive along the
298 $z$-axis, as a very long length scale for the thermal gradient may
299 cause excessively hot or cold temperatures in the middle of the
300 solvent region and lead to undesired phenomena such as solvent boiling
301 or freezing when a thermal flux is applied. Conversely, too few
302 solvent molecules would change the normal behavior of the liquid
303 phase. Therefore, our $N_{solvent}$ values were chosen to ensure that
304 these extreme cases did not happen to our simulations. The spacing
305 between periodic images of the gold interfaces is $45 \sim 75$\AA in
306 our simulations.
307
308 The initial configurations generated are further equilibrated with the
309 $x$ and $y$ dimensions fixed, only allowing the $z$-length scale to
310 change. This is to ensure that the equilibration of liquid phase does
311 not affect the metal's crystalline structure. Comparisons were made
312 with simulations that allowed changes of $L_x$ and $L_y$ during NPT
313 equilibration. No substantial changes in the box geometry were noticed
314 in these simulations. After ensuring the liquid phase reaches
315 equilibrium at atmospheric pressure (1 atm), further equilibration was
316 carried out under canonical (NVT) and microcanonical (NVE) ensembles.
317
318 After the systems reach equilibrium, NIVS was used to impose an
319 unphysical thermal flux between the metal and the liquid phases. Most
320 of our simulations were done under an average temperature of
321 $\sim$200K. Therefore, thermal flux usually came from the metal to the
322 liquid so that the liquid has a higher temperature and would not
323 freeze due to lowered temperatures. After this induced temperature
324 gradient had stabilized, the temperature profile of the simulation cell
325 was recorded. To do this, the simulation cell is divided evenly into
326 $N$ slabs along the $z$-axis. The average temperatures of each slab
327 are recorded for 1$\sim$2 ns. When the slab width $d$ of each slab is
328 the same, the derivatives of $T$ with respect to slab number $n$ can
329 be directly used for $G^\prime$ calculations: \begin{equation}
330 G^\prime = |J_z|\Big|\frac{\partial^2 T}{\partial z^2}\Big|
331 \Big/\left(\frac{\partial T}{\partial z}\right)^2
332 = |J_z|\Big|\frac{1}{d^2}\frac{\partial^2 T}{\partial n^2}\Big|
333 \Big/\left(\frac{1}{d}\frac{\partial T}{\partial n}\right)^2
334 = |J_z|\Big|\frac{\partial^2 T}{\partial n^2}\Big|
335 \Big/\left(\frac{\partial T}{\partial n}\right)^2
336 \label{derivativeG2}
337 \end{equation}
338 The absolute values in Eq. \ref{derivativeG2} appear because the
339 direction of the flux $\vec{J}$ is in an opposing direction on either
340 side of the metal slab.
341
342 All of the above simulation procedures use a time step of 1 fs. Each
343 equilibration stage took a minimum of 100 ps, although in some cases,
344 longer equilibration stages were utilized.
345
346 \subsection{Force Field Parameters}
347 Our simulations include a number of chemically distinct components.
348 Figure \ref{demoMol} demonstrates the sites defined for both
349 United-Atom and All-Atom models of the organic solvent and capping
350 agents in our simulations. Force field parameters are needed for
351 interactions both between the same type of particles and between
352 particles of different species.
353
354 \begin{figure}
355 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{structures}
356 \caption{Structures of the capping agent and solvents utilized in
357 these simulations. The chemically-distinct sites (a-e) are expanded
358 in terms of constituent atoms for both United Atom (UA) and All Atom
359 (AA) force fields. Most parameters are from References
360 \protect\cite{TraPPE-UA.alkanes,TraPPE-UA.alkylbenzenes,TraPPE-UA.thiols}
361 (UA) and \protect\cite{OPLSAA} (AA). Cross-interactions with the Au
362 atoms are given in Table 1 in the supporting information.}
363 \label{demoMol}
364 \end{figure}
365
366 The Au-Au interactions in metal lattice slab is described by the
367 quantum Sutton-Chen (QSC) formulation.\cite{PhysRevB.59.3527} The QSC
368 potentials include zero-point quantum corrections and are
369 reparametrized for accurate surface energies compared to the
370 Sutton-Chen potentials.\cite{Chen90}
371
372 For the two solvent molecules, {\it n}-hexane and toluene, two
373 different atomistic models were utilized. Both solvents were modeled
374 using United-Atom (UA) and All-Atom (AA) models. The TraPPE-UA
375 parameters\cite{TraPPE-UA.alkanes,TraPPE-UA.alkylbenzenes} are used
376 for our UA solvent molecules. In these models, sites are located at
377 the carbon centers for alkyl groups. Bonding interactions, including
378 bond stretches and bends and torsions, were used for intra-molecular
379 sites closer than 3 bonds. For non-bonded interactions, Lennard-Jones
380 potentials are used.
381
382 By eliminating explicit hydrogen atoms, the TraPPE-UA models are
383 simple and computationally efficient, while maintaining good accuracy.
384 However, the TraPPE-UA model for alkanes is known to predict a slightly
385 lower boiling point than experimental values. This is one of the
386 reasons we used a lower average temperature (200K) for our
387 simulations. If heat is transferred to the liquid phase during the
388 NIVS simulation, the liquid in the hot slab can actually be
389 substantially warmer than the mean temperature in the simulation. The
390 lower mean temperatures therefore prevent solvent boiling.
391
392 For UA-toluene, the non-bonded potentials between intermolecular sites
393 have a similar Lennard-Jones formulation. The toluene molecules were
394 treated as a single rigid body, so there was no need for
395 intramolecular interactions (including bonds, bends, or torsions) in
396 this solvent model.
397
398 Besides the TraPPE-UA models, AA models for both organic solvents are
399 included in our studies as well. The OPLS-AA\cite{OPLSAA} force fields
400 were used. For hexane, additional explicit hydrogen sites were
401 included. Besides bonding and non-bonded site-site interactions,
402 partial charges and the electrostatic interactions were added to each
403 CT and HC site. For toluene, a flexible model for the toluene molecule
404 was utilized which included bond, bend, torsion, and inversion
405 potentials to enforce ring planarity.
406
407 The butanethiol capping agent in our simulations, were also modeled
408 with both UA and AA model. The TraPPE-UA force field includes
409 parameters for thiol molecules\cite{TraPPE-UA.thiols} and are used for
410 UA butanethiol model in our simulations. The OPLS-AA also provides
411 parameters for alkyl thiols. However, alkyl thiols adsorbed on Au(111)
412 surfaces do not have the hydrogen atom bonded to sulfur. To derive
413 suitable parameters for butanethiol adsorbed on Au(111) surfaces, we
414 adopt the S parameters from Luedtke and Landman\cite{landman:1998} and
415 modify the parameters for the CTS atom to maintain charge neutrality
416 in the molecule. Note that the model choice (UA or AA) for the capping
417 agent can be different from the solvent. Regardless of model choice,
418 the force field parameters for interactions between capping agent and
419 solvent can be derived using Lorentz-Berthelot Mixing Rule:
420 \begin{eqnarray}
421 \sigma_{ij} & = & \frac{1}{2} \left(\sigma_{ii} + \sigma_{jj}\right) \\
422 \epsilon_{ij} & = & \sqrt{\epsilon_{ii}\epsilon_{jj}}
423 \end{eqnarray}
424
425 To describe the interactions between metal (Au) and non-metal atoms,
426 we refer to an adsorption study of alkyl thiols on gold surfaces by
427 Vlugt {\it et al.}\cite{vlugt:cpc2007154} They fitted an effective
428 Lennard-Jones form of potential parameters for the interaction between
429 Au and pseudo-atoms CH$_x$ and S based on a well-established and
430 widely-used effective potential of Hautman and Klein for the Au(111)
431 surface.\cite{hautman:4994} As our simulations require the gold slab
432 to be flexible to accommodate thermal excitation, the pair-wise form
433 of potentials they developed was used for our study.
434
435 The potentials developed from {\it ab initio} calculations by Leng
436 {\it et al.}\cite{doi:10.1021/jp034405s} are adopted for the
437 interactions between Au and aromatic C/H atoms in toluene. However,
438 the Lennard-Jones parameters between Au and other types of particles,
439 (e.g. AA alkanes) have not yet been established. For these
440 interactions, the Lorentz-Berthelot mixing rule can be used to derive
441 effective single-atom LJ parameters for the metal using the fit values
442 for toluene. These are then used to construct reasonable mixing
443 parameters for the interactions between the gold and other atoms.
444 Table 1 in the supporting information summarizes the
445 ``metal/non-metal'' parameters utilized in our simulations.
446
447 \section{Results}
448 [L-J COMPARED TO RNEMD NIVS; WATER COMPARED TO RNEMD NIVS AND EMD;
449 SLIP BOUNDARY VS STICK BOUNDARY; ICE-WATER INTERFACES]
450
451 There are many factors contributing to the measured interfacial
452 conductance; some of these factors are physically motivated
453 (e.g. coverage of the surface by the capping agent coverage and
454 solvent identity), while some are governed by parameters of the
455 methodology (e.g. applied flux and the formulas used to obtain the
456 conductance). In this section we discuss the major physical and
457 calculational effects on the computed conductivity.
458
459 \subsection{Effects due to capping agent coverage}
460
461 A series of different initial conditions with a range of surface
462 coverages was prepared and solvated with various with both of the
463 solvent molecules. These systems were then equilibrated and their
464 interfacial thermal conductivity was measured with the NIVS
465 algorithm. Figure \ref{coverage} demonstrates the trend of conductance
466 with respect to surface coverage.
467
468 \begin{figure}
469 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{coverage}
470 \caption{The interfacial thermal conductivity ($G$) has a
471 non-monotonic dependence on the degree of surface capping. This
472 data is for the Au(111) / butanethiol / solvent interface with
473 various UA force fields at $\langle T\rangle \sim $200K.}
474 \label{coverage}
475 \end{figure}
476
477 In partially covered surfaces, the derivative definition for
478 $G^\prime$ (Eq. \ref{derivativeG}) becomes difficult to apply, as the
479 location of maximum change of $\lambda$ becomes washed out. The
480 discrete definition (Eq. \ref{discreteG}) is easier to apply, as the
481 Gibbs dividing surface is still well-defined. Therefore, $G$ (not
482 $G^\prime$) was used in this section.
483
484 From Figure \ref{coverage}, one can see the significance of the
485 presence of capping agents. When even a small fraction of the Au(111)
486 surface sites are covered with butanethiols, the conductivity exhibits
487 an enhancement by at least a factor of 3. Capping agents are clearly
488 playing a major role in thermal transport at metal / organic solvent
489 surfaces.
490
491 We note a non-monotonic behavior in the interfacial conductance as a
492 function of surface coverage. The maximum conductance (largest $G$)
493 happens when the surfaces are about 75\% covered with butanethiol
494 caps. The reason for this behavior is not entirely clear. One
495 explanation is that incomplete butanethiol coverage allows small gaps
496 between butanethiols to form. These gaps can be filled by transient
497 solvent molecules. These solvent molecules couple very strongly with
498 the hot capping agent molecules near the surface, and can then carry
499 away (diffusively) the excess thermal energy from the surface.
500
501 There appears to be a competition between the conduction of the
502 thermal energy away from the surface by the capping agents (enhanced
503 by greater coverage) and the coupling of the capping agents with the
504 solvent (enhanced by interdigitation at lower coverages). This
505 competition would lead to the non-monotonic coverage behavior observed
506 here.
507
508 Results for rigid body toluene solvent, as well as the UA hexane, are
509 within the ranges expected from prior experimental
510 work.\cite{Wilson:2002uq,cahill:793,PhysRevB.80.195406} This suggests
511 that explicit hydrogen atoms might not be required for modeling
512 thermal transport in these systems. C-H vibrational modes do not see
513 significant excited state population at low temperatures, and are not
514 likely to carry lower frequency excitations from the solid layer into
515 the bulk liquid.
516
517 The toluene solvent does not exhibit the same behavior as hexane in
518 that $G$ remains at approximately the same magnitude when the capping
519 coverage increases from 25\% to 75\%. Toluene, as a rigid planar
520 molecule, cannot occupy the relatively small gaps between the capping
521 agents as easily as the chain-like {\it n}-hexane. The effect of
522 solvent coupling to the capping agent is therefore weaker in toluene
523 except at the very lowest coverage levels. This effect counters the
524 coverage-dependent conduction of heat away from the metal surface,
525 leading to a much flatter $G$ vs. coverage trend than is observed in
526 {\it n}-hexane.
527
528 \subsection{Effects due to Solvent \& Solvent Models}
529 In addition to UA solvent and capping agent models, AA models have
530 also been included in our simulations. In most of this work, the same
531 (UA or AA) model for solvent and capping agent was used, but it is
532 also possible to utilize different models for different components.
533 We have also included isotopic substitutions (Hydrogen to Deuterium)
534 to decrease the explicit vibrational overlap between solvent and
535 capping agent. Table \ref{modelTest} summarizes the results of these
536 studies.
537
538 \begin{table*}
539 \begin{minipage}{\linewidth}
540 \begin{center}
541
542 \caption{Computed interfacial thermal conductance ($G$ and
543 $G^\prime$) values for interfaces using various models for
544 solvent and capping agent (or without capping agent) at
545 $\langle T\rangle\sim$200K. Here ``D'' stands for deuterated
546 solvent or capping agent molecules. Error estimates are
547 indicated in parentheses.}
548
549 \begin{tabular}{llccc}
550 \hline\hline
551 Butanethiol model & Solvent & $G$ & $G^\prime$ \\
552 (or bare surface) & model & \multicolumn{2}{c}{(MW/m$^2$/K)} \\
553 \hline
554 UA & UA hexane & 131(9) & 87(10) \\
555 & UA hexane(D) & 153(5) & 136(13) \\
556 & AA hexane & 131(6) & 122(10) \\
557 & UA toluene & 187(16) & 151(11) \\
558 & AA toluene & 200(36) & 149(53) \\
559 \hline
560 AA & UA hexane & 116(9) & 129(8) \\
561 & AA hexane & 442(14) & 356(31) \\
562 & AA hexane(D) & 222(12) & 234(54) \\
563 & UA toluene & 125(25) & 97(60) \\
564 & AA toluene & 487(56) & 290(42) \\
565 \hline
566 AA(D) & UA hexane & 158(25) & 172(4) \\
567 & AA hexane & 243(29) & 191(11) \\
568 & AA toluene & 364(36) & 322(67) \\
569 \hline
570 bare & UA hexane & 46.5(3.2) & 49.4(4.5) \\
571 & UA hexane(D) & 43.9(4.6) & 43.0(2.0) \\
572 & AA hexane & 31.0(1.4) & 29.4(1.3) \\
573 & UA toluene & 70.1(1.3) & 65.8(0.5) \\
574 \hline\hline
575 \end{tabular}
576 \label{modelTest}
577 \end{center}
578 \end{minipage}
579 \end{table*}
580
581 To facilitate direct comparison between force fields, systems with the
582 same capping agent and solvent were prepared with the same length
583 scales for the simulation cells.
584
585 On bare metal / solvent surfaces, different force field models for
586 hexane yield similar results for both $G$ and $G^\prime$, and these
587 two definitions agree with each other very well. This is primarily an
588 indicator of weak interactions between the metal and the solvent.
589
590 For the fully-covered surfaces, the choice of force field for the
591 capping agent and solvent has a large impact on the calculated values
592 of $G$ and $G^\prime$. The AA thiol to AA solvent conductivities are
593 much larger than their UA to UA counterparts, and these values exceed
594 the experimental estimates by a large measure. The AA force field
595 allows significant energy to go into C-H (or C-D) stretching modes,
596 and since these modes are high frequency, this non-quantum behavior is
597 likely responsible for the overestimate of the conductivity. Compared
598 to the AA model, the UA model yields more reasonable conductivity
599 values with much higher computational efficiency.
600
601 \subsubsection{Are electronic excitations in the metal important?}
602 Because they lack electronic excitations, the QSC and related embedded
603 atom method (EAM) models for gold are known to predict unreasonably
604 low values for bulk conductivity
605 ($\lambda$).\cite{kuang:164101,ISI:000207079300006,Clancy:1992} If the
606 conductance between the phases ($G$) is governed primarily by phonon
607 excitation (and not electronic degrees of freedom), one would expect a
608 classical model to capture most of the interfacial thermal
609 conductance. Our results for $G$ and $G^\prime$ indicate that this is
610 indeed the case, and suggest that the modeling of interfacial thermal
611 transport depends primarily on the description of the interactions
612 between the various components at the interface. When the metal is
613 chemically capped, the primary barrier to thermal conductivity appears
614 to be the interface between the capping agent and the surrounding
615 solvent, so the excitations in the metal have little impact on the
616 value of $G$.
617
618 \subsection{Effects due to methodology and simulation parameters}
619
620 We have varied the parameters of the simulations in order to
621 investigate how these factors would affect the computation of $G$. Of
622 particular interest are: 1) the length scale for the applied thermal
623 gradient (modified by increasing the amount of solvent in the system),
624 2) the sign and magnitude of the applied thermal flux, 3) the average
625 temperature of the simulation (which alters the solvent density during
626 equilibration), and 4) the definition of the interfacial conductance
627 (Eqs. (\ref{discreteG}) or (\ref{derivativeG})) used in the
628 calculation.
629
630 Systems of different lengths were prepared by altering the number of
631 solvent molecules and extending the length of the box along the $z$
632 axis to accomodate the extra solvent. Equilibration at the same
633 temperature and pressure conditions led to nearly identical surface
634 areas ($L_x$ and $L_y$) available to the metal and capping agent,
635 while the extra solvent served mainly to lengthen the axis that was
636 used to apply the thermal flux. For a given value of the applied
637 flux, the different $z$ length scale has only a weak effect on the
638 computed conductivities.
639
640 \subsubsection{Effects of applied flux}
641 The NIVS algorithm allows changes in both the sign and magnitude of
642 the applied flux. It is possible to reverse the direction of heat
643 flow simply by changing the sign of the flux, and thermal gradients
644 which would be difficult to obtain experimentally ($5$ K/\AA) can be
645 easily simulated. However, the magnitude of the applied flux is not
646 arbitrary if one aims to obtain a stable and reliable thermal gradient.
647 A temperature gradient can be lost in the noise if $|J_z|$ is too
648 small, and excessive $|J_z|$ values can cause phase transitions if the
649 extremes of the simulation cell become widely separated in
650 temperature. Also, if $|J_z|$ is too large for the bulk conductivity
651 of the materials, the thermal gradient will never reach a stable
652 state.
653
654 Within a reasonable range of $J_z$ values, we were able to study how
655 $G$ changes as a function of this flux. In what follows, we use
656 positive $J_z$ values to denote the case where energy is being
657 transferred by the method from the metal phase and into the liquid.
658 The resulting gradient therefore has a higher temperature in the
659 liquid phase. Negative flux values reverse this transfer, and result
660 in higher temperature metal phases. The conductance measured under
661 different applied $J_z$ values is listed in Tables 2 and 3 in the
662 supporting information. These results do not indicate that $G$ depends
663 strongly on $J_z$ within this flux range. The linear response of flux
664 to thermal gradient simplifies our investigations in that we can rely
665 on $G$ measurement with only a small number $J_z$ values.
666
667 The sign of $J_z$ is a different matter, however, as this can alter
668 the temperature on the two sides of the interface. The average
669 temperature values reported are for the entire system, and not for the
670 liquid phase, so at a given $\langle T \rangle$, the system with
671 positive $J_z$ has a warmer liquid phase. This means that if the
672 liquid carries thermal energy via diffusive transport, {\it positive}
673 $J_z$ values will result in increased molecular motion on the liquid
674 side of the interface, and this will increase the measured
675 conductivity.
676
677 \subsubsection{Effects due to average temperature}
678
679 We also studied the effect of average system temperature on the
680 interfacial conductance. The simulations are first equilibrated in
681 the NPT ensemble at 1 atm. The TraPPE-UA model for hexane tends to
682 predict a lower boiling point (and liquid state density) than
683 experiments. This lower-density liquid phase leads to reduced contact
684 between the hexane and butanethiol, and this accounts for our
685 observation of lower conductance at higher temperatures. In raising
686 the average temperature from 200K to 250K, the density drop of
687 $\sim$20\% in the solvent phase leads to a $\sim$40\% drop in the
688 conductance.
689
690 Similar behavior is observed in the TraPPE-UA model for toluene,
691 although this model has better agreement with the experimental
692 densities of toluene. The expansion of the toluene liquid phase is
693 not as significant as that of the hexane (8.3\% over 100K), and this
694 limits the effect to $\sim$20\% drop in thermal conductivity.
695
696 Although we have not mapped out the behavior at a large number of
697 temperatures, is clear that there will be a strong temperature
698 dependence in the interfacial conductance when the physical properties
699 of one side of the interface (notably the density) change rapidly as a
700 function of temperature.
701
702 Besides the lower interfacial thermal conductance, surfaces at
703 relatively high temperatures are susceptible to reconstructions,
704 particularly when butanethiols fully cover the Au(111) surface. These
705 reconstructions include surface Au atoms which migrate outward to the
706 S atom layer, and butanethiol molecules which embed into the surface
707 Au layer. The driving force for this behavior is the strong Au-S
708 interactions which are modeled here with a deep Lennard-Jones
709 potential. This phenomenon agrees with reconstructions that have been
710 experimentally
711 observed.\cite{doi:10.1021/j100035a033,doi:10.1021/la026493y}. Vlugt
712 {\it et al.} kept their Au(111) slab rigid so that their simulations
713 could reach 300K without surface
714 reconstructions.\cite{vlugt:cpc2007154} Since surface reconstructions
715 blur the interface, the measurement of $G$ becomes more difficult to
716 conduct at higher temperatures. For this reason, most of our
717 measurements are undertaken at $\langle T\rangle\sim$200K where
718 reconstruction is minimized.
719
720 However, when the surface is not completely covered by butanethiols,
721 the simulated system appears to be more resistent to the
722 reconstruction. Our Au / butanethiol / toluene system had the Au(111)
723 surfaces 90\% covered by butanethiols, but did not see this above
724 phenomena even at $\langle T\rangle\sim$300K. That said, we did
725 observe butanethiols migrating to neighboring three-fold sites during
726 a simulation. Since the interface persisted in these simulations, we
727 were able to obtain $G$'s for these interfaces even at a relatively
728 high temperature without being affected by surface reconstructions.
729
730 \section{Discussion}
731 [COMBINE W. RESULTS]
732 The primary result of this work is that the capping agent acts as an
733 efficient thermal coupler between solid and solvent phases. One of
734 the ways the capping agent can carry out this role is to down-shift
735 between the phonon vibrations in the solid (which carry the heat from
736 the gold) and the molecular vibrations in the liquid (which carry some
737 of the heat in the solvent).
738
739 To investigate the mechanism of interfacial thermal conductance, the
740 vibrational power spectrum was computed. Power spectra were taken for
741 individual components in different simulations. To obtain these
742 spectra, simulations were run after equilibration in the
743 microcanonical (NVE) ensemble and without a thermal
744 gradient. Snapshots of configurations were collected at a frequency
745 that is higher than that of the fastest vibrations occurring in the
746 simulations. With these configurations, the velocity auto-correlation
747 functions can be computed:
748 \begin{equation}
749 C_A (t) = \langle\vec{v}_A (t)\cdot\vec{v}_A (0)\rangle
750 \label{vCorr}
751 \end{equation}
752 The power spectrum is constructed via a Fourier transform of the
753 symmetrized velocity autocorrelation function,
754 \begin{equation}
755 \hat{f}(\omega) =
756 \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} C_A (t) e^{-2\pi it\omega}\,dt
757 \label{fourier}
758 \end{equation}
759
760 \subsection{The role of specific vibrations}
761 The vibrational spectra for gold slabs in different environments are
762 shown as in Figure \ref{specAu}. Regardless of the presence of
763 solvent, the gold surfaces which are covered by butanethiol molecules
764 exhibit an additional peak observed at a frequency of
765 $\sim$165cm$^{-1}$. We attribute this peak to the S-Au bonding
766 vibration. This vibration enables efficient thermal coupling of the
767 surface Au layer to the capping agents. Therefore, in our simulations,
768 the Au / S interfaces do not appear to be the primary barrier to
769 thermal transport when compared with the butanethiol / solvent
770 interfaces. This supports the results of Luo {\it et
771 al.}\cite{Luo20101}, who reported $G$ for Au-SAM junctions roughly
772 twice as large as what we have computed for the thiol-liquid
773 interfaces.
774
775 \begin{figure}
776 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{vibration}
777 \caption{The vibrational power spectrum for thiol-capped gold has an
778 additional vibrational peak at $\sim $165cm$^{-1}$. Bare gold
779 surfaces (both with and without a solvent over-layer) are missing
780 this peak. A similar peak at $\sim $165cm$^{-1}$ also appears in
781 the vibrational power spectrum for the butanethiol capping agents.}
782 \label{specAu}
783 \end{figure}
784
785 Also in this figure, we show the vibrational power spectrum for the
786 bound butanethiol molecules, which also exhibits the same
787 $\sim$165cm$^{-1}$ peak.
788
789 \subsection{Overlap of power spectra}
790 A comparison of the results obtained from the two different organic
791 solvents can also provide useful information of the interfacial
792 thermal transport process. In particular, the vibrational overlap
793 between the butanethiol and the organic solvents suggests a highly
794 efficient thermal exchange between these components. Very high
795 thermal conductivity was observed when AA models were used and C-H
796 vibrations were treated classically. The presence of extra degrees of
797 freedom in the AA force field yields higher heat exchange rates
798 between the two phases and results in a much higher conductivity than
799 in the UA force field. The all-atom classical models include high
800 frequency modes which should be unpopulated at our relatively low
801 temperatures. This artifact is likely the cause of the high thermal
802 conductance in all-atom MD simulations.
803
804 The similarity in the vibrational modes available to solvent and
805 capping agent can be reduced by deuterating one of the two components
806 (Fig. \ref{aahxntln}). Once either the hexanes or the butanethiols
807 are deuterated, one can observe a significantly lower $G$ and
808 $G^\prime$ values (Table \ref{modelTest}).
809
810 \begin{figure}
811 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{aahxntln}
812 \caption{Spectra obtained for all-atom (AA) Au / butanethiol / solvent
813 systems. When butanethiol is deuterated (lower left), its
814 vibrational overlap with hexane decreases significantly. Since
815 aromatic molecules and the butanethiol are vibrationally dissimilar,
816 the change is not as dramatic when toluene is the solvent (right).}
817 \label{aahxntln}
818 \end{figure}
819
820 For the Au / butanethiol / toluene interfaces, having the AA
821 butanethiol deuterated did not yield a significant change in the
822 measured conductance. Compared to the C-H vibrational overlap between
823 hexane and butanethiol, both of which have alkyl chains, the overlap
824 between toluene and butanethiol is not as significant and thus does
825 not contribute as much to the heat exchange process.
826
827 Previous observations of Zhang {\it et al.}\cite{hase:2010} indicate
828 that the {\it intra}molecular heat transport due to alkylthiols is
829 highly efficient. Combining our observations with those of Zhang {\it
830 et al.}, it appears that butanethiol acts as a channel to expedite
831 heat flow from the gold surface and into the alkyl chain. The
832 vibrational coupling between the metal and the liquid phase can
833 therefore be enhanced with the presence of suitable capping agents.
834
835 Deuterated models in the UA force field did not decouple the thermal
836 transport as well as in the AA force field. The UA models, even
837 though they have eliminated the high frequency C-H vibrational
838 overlap, still have significant overlap in the lower-frequency
839 portions of the infrared spectra (Figure \ref{uahxnua}). Deuterating
840 the UA models did not decouple the low frequency region enough to
841 produce an observable difference for the results of $G$ (Table
842 \ref{modelTest}).
843
844 \begin{figure}
845 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{uahxnua}
846 \caption{Vibrational power spectra for UA models for the butanethiol
847 and hexane solvent (upper panel) show the high degree of overlap
848 between these two molecules, particularly at lower frequencies.
849 Deuterating a UA model for the solvent (lower panel) does not
850 decouple the two spectra to the same degree as in the AA force
851 field (see Fig \ref{aahxntln}).}
852 \label{uahxnua}
853 \end{figure}
854
855 \section{Conclusions}
856 The NIVS algorithm has been applied to simulations of
857 butanethiol-capped Au(111) surfaces in the presence of organic
858 solvents. This algorithm allows the application of unphysical thermal
859 flux to transfer heat between the metal and the liquid phase. With the
860 flux applied, we were able to measure the corresponding thermal
861 gradients and to obtain interfacial thermal conductivities. Under
862 steady states, 2-3 ns trajectory simulations are sufficient for
863 computation of this quantity.
864
865 Our simulations have seen significant conductance enhancement in the
866 presence of capping agent, compared with the bare gold / liquid
867 interfaces. The vibrational coupling between the metal and the liquid
868 phase is enhanced by a chemically-bonded capping agent. Furthermore,
869 the coverage percentage of the capping agent plays an important role
870 in the interfacial thermal transport process. Moderately low coverages
871 allow higher contact between capping agent and solvent, and thus could
872 further enhance the heat transfer process, giving a non-monotonic
873 behavior of conductance with increasing coverage.
874
875 Our results, particularly using the UA models, agree well with
876 available experimental data. The AA models tend to overestimate the
877 interfacial thermal conductance in that the classically treated C-H
878 vibrations become too easily populated. Compared to the AA models, the
879 UA models have higher computational efficiency with satisfactory
880 accuracy, and thus are preferable in modeling interfacial thermal
881 transport.
882
883 Of the two definitions for $G$, the discrete form
884 (Eq. \ref{discreteG}) was easier to use and gives out relatively
885 consistent results, while the derivative form (Eq. \ref{derivativeG})
886 is not as versatile. Although $G^\prime$ gives out comparable results
887 and follows similar trend with $G$ when measuring close to fully
888 covered or bare surfaces, the spatial resolution of $T$ profile
889 required for the use of a derivative form is limited by the number of
890 bins and the sampling required to obtain thermal gradient information.
891
892 Vlugt {\it et al.} have investigated the surface thiol structures for
893 nanocrystalline gold and pointed out that they differ from those of
894 the Au(111) surface.\cite{landman:1998,vlugt:cpc2007154} This
895 difference could also cause differences in the interfacial thermal
896 transport behavior. To investigate this problem, one would need an
897 effective method for applying thermal gradients in non-planar
898 (i.e. spherical) geometries.
899
900 \section{Acknowledgments}
901 Support for this project was provided by the National Science
902 Foundation under grant CHE-0848243. Computational time was provided by
903 the Center for Research Computing (CRC) at the University of Notre
904 Dame.
905
906 \newpage
907
908 \bibliography{stokes}
909
910 \end{doublespace}
911 \end{document}
912