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# Content
1 \documentclass[11pt]{article}
2 \usepackage{amsmath}
3 \usepackage{amssymb}
4 \usepackage{times}
5 \usepackage{mathptm}
6 \usepackage{setspace}
7 \usepackage{endfloat}
8 \usepackage{caption}
9 \usepackage{tabularx}
10 \usepackage{longtable}
11 \usepackage{graphicx}
12 \usepackage{multirow}
13 \usepackage{multicol}
14 \usepackage[version=3]{mhchem} % this is a great package for formatting chemical reactions
15 \usepackage[square, comma, sort&compress]{natbib}
16 \usepackage{url}
17 \pagestyle{plain} \pagenumbering{arabic} \oddsidemargin 0.0cm
18 \evensidemargin 0.0cm \topmargin -21pt \headsep 10pt \textheight
19 9.0in \textwidth 6.5in \brokenpenalty=10000
20
21 % double space list of tables and figures
22 %\AtBeginDelayedFloats{\renewcomand{\baselinestretch}{1.66}}
23 \setlength{\abovecaptionskip}{20 pt}
24 \setlength{\belowcaptionskip}{30 pt}
25
26 \bibpunct{}{}{,}{s}{}{;}
27
28 \citestyle{nature}
29 \bibliographystyle{achemso}
30
31 \begin{document}
32
33 \newcolumntype{A}{p{1.5in}}
34 \newcolumntype{B}{p{0.75in}}
35
36 \title{Simulations of heat conduction at thiolate-capped gold
37 surfaces: The role of chain length and solvent penetration}
38
39 \author{Kelsey M. Stocker and J. Daniel
40 Gezelter\footnote{Corresponding author. \ Electronic mail:
41 gezelter@nd.edu} \\
42 251 Nieuwland Science Hall, \\
43 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,\\
44 University of Notre Dame\\
45 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
46
47 \date{\today}
48
49 \maketitle
50
51 \begin{doublespace}
52
53 \begin{abstract}
54
55 We report on simulations of heat conduction through Au(111) / hexane
56 interfaces in which the surface has been protected by a mixture of
57 short and long chain alkanethiolate ligands. Reverse
58 non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (RNEMD) was used to create a
59 thermal flux between the metal and solvent, and thermal conductance
60 was computed using the resulting thermal profiles near the
61 interface. We find a non-monotonic dependence of the interfacial
62 thermal conductance on the fraction of long chains present at the
63 interface, and correlate this behavior to both solvent ordering and
64 the rate of solvent escape from the thiolate layer immediately in
65 contact with the metal surface. Our results suggest that a mixed
66 vibrational transfer / convection model is necessary to explain the
67 features of heat transfer at this interface. The alignment of the
68 solvent chains with the ordered ligand allows rapid transfer of
69 energy to the trapped solvent and is the dominant feature for
70 ordered ligand layers. Diffusion of the vibrationally excited
71 solvent into the bulk also plays a significant role when the ligands
72 are less tightly packed.
73
74 \end{abstract}
75
76 \newpage
77
78 %\narrowtext
79
80 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
81 % **INTRODUCTION**
82 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
83 \section{Introduction}
84
85 The structural details of the interfaces of metal nanoparticles
86 determine how energy flows between these particles and their
87 surroundings. Understanding this energy flow is essential in designing
88 and functionalizing metallic nanoparticles for use in plasmonic photothermal
89 therapies,\cite{Jain:2007ux,Petrova:2007ad,Gnyawali:2008lp,Mazzaglia:2008to,Huff:2007ye,Larson:2007hw}
90 which rely on the ability of metallic nanoparticles to absorb light in
91 the near-IR, a portion of the spectrum in which living tissue is very
92 nearly transparent. The relevant physical property controlling the
93 transfer of this energy as heat into the surrounding tissue is the
94 interfacial thermal conductance, $G$, which can be somewhat difficult
95 to determine experimentally.\cite{Wilson:2002uq,Plech:2005kx}
96
97 Metallic particles have also been proposed for use in efficient
98 thermal-transfer fluids, although careful experiments by Eapen {\it et
99 al.} have shown that metal-particle-based nanofluids have thermal
100 conductivities that match Maxwell predictions.\cite{Eapen:2007th} The
101 likely cause of previously reported non-Maxwell
102 behavior\cite{Eastman:2001wb,Keblinski:2002bx,Lee:1999ct,Xue:2003ya,Xue:2004oa}
103 is percolation networks of nanoparticles exchanging energy via the
104 solvent,\cite{Eapen:2007mw} so it is important to get a detailed
105 molecular picture of particle-ligand and ligand-solvent interactions
106 in order to understand the thermal behavior of complex fluids. To
107 date, there have been few reported values (either from theory or
108 experiment) of $G$ for ligand-protected nanoparticles embedded in
109 liquids, and there is a significant gap in knowledge about how
110 chemically distinct ligands or protecting groups will affect heat
111 transport from the particles.
112
113 Experimentally, the thermal properties of various nanostructured
114 interfaces have been investigated by a number of groups. Cahill and
115 coworkers studied thermal transport from metal nanoparticle/fluid
116 interfaces, epitaxial TiN/single crystal oxide interfaces, and
117 hydrophilic and hydrophobic interfaces between water and solids with
118 different self-assembled
119 monolayers.\cite{cahill:793,Wilson:2002uq,PhysRevB.67.054302,doi:10.1021/jp048375k,PhysRevLett.96.186101}
120 Wang {\it et al.} studied heat transport through long-chain
121 hydrocarbon monolayers on gold substrate at the individual molecular
122 level,\cite{Wang10082007} Schmidt {\it et al.} studied the role of
123 cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) on the thermal transport between
124 gold nanorods and solvent,\cite{doi:10.1021/jp8051888} and Juv\'e {\it
125 et al.} studied the cooling dynamics, which is controlled by thermal
126 interface resistance of glass-embedded metal
127 nanoparticles.\cite{PhysRevB.80.195406} Although interfaces are
128 normally considered barriers for heat transport, Alper {\it et al.}
129 have suggested that specific ligands (capping agents) could completely
130 eliminate this barrier
131 ($G\rightarrow\infty$).\cite{doi:10.1021/la904855s}
132
133 Recently, Hase and coworkers employed Non-Equilibrium Molecular
134 Dynamics (NEMD) simulations to study thermal transport from hot
135 Au(111) substrate to a self-assembled monolayer of alkylthiol with
136 relatively long chain (8-20 carbon atoms).\cite{hase:2010,hase:2011}
137 These simulations explained many of the features of the experiments of
138 Wang {\it et al.} However, ensemble averaged measurements for heat
139 conductance of interfaces between the capping monolayer on Au and a
140 solvent phase have yet to be studied with their approach. In previous
141 simulations, our group applied a variant of reverse non-equilibrium
142 molecular dynamics (RNEMD) to calculate the interfacial thermal
143 conductance at a metal / organic solvent interface that had been
144 chemically protected by butanethiolate groups.\cite{kuang:AuThl} Our
145 calculations suggested an explanation for the very large thermal
146 conductivity at alkanethiol-capped metal surfaces when compared with
147 bare metal/solvent interfaces. Specifically, the chemical bond
148 between the metal and the ligand introduces a vibrational overlap that
149 is not present without the protecting group, and the overlap between
150 the vibrational spectra (metal to ligand, ligand to solvent) provides
151 a mechanism for rapid thermal transport across the interface.
152
153 A notable result of the previous simulations was the non-monotonic
154 dependence of $G$ on the fractional coverage of the metal surface by
155 the chemical protecting group. Gaps in surface coverage allow the
156 solvent molecules to come into direct contact with ligands that have
157 been heated by the metal surface, absorb thermal energy from the
158 ligands, and then diffuse away. Quantifying the role of overall
159 surface coverage was difficult because the ligands have lateral
160 mobility on the surface and can aggregate to form domains on the
161 timescale of the simulation.
162
163 To isolate the effect of ligand/solvent coupling while avoiding
164 lateral mobility of the surface ligands, the current work utilizes
165 monolayers of mixed chain-lengths in which the length mismatch between
166 long and short chains is sufficient to accommodate solvent
167 molecules. These completely covered (but mixed-chain) surfaces are
168 significantly less prone to surface domain formation, and allow us to
169 further investigate the mechanism of heat transport to the solvent. A
170 thermal flux is created using velocity shearing and scaling reverse
171 non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (VSS-RNEMD), and the resulting
172 temperature profiles are analyzed to yield information about the
173 interfacial thermal conductance.
174
175
176 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
177 % **METHODOLOGY**
178 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
179 \section{Methodology}
180
181 There are many ways to compute bulk transport properties from
182 classical molecular dynamics simulations. Equilibrium Molecular
183 Dynamics (EMD) simulations can be used to compute the relevant time
184 correlation functions and transport coefficients can be calculated
185 assuming that linear response theory
186 holds.\cite{PhysRevB.37.5677,MASSOBRIO:1984bl,PhysRev.119.1,Viscardy:2007rp,che:6888,kinaci:014106}
187 For some transport properties (notably thermal conductivity), EMD
188 approaches are subject to noise and poor convergence of the relevant
189 correlation functions. Traditional Non-equilibrium Molecular Dynamics
190 (NEMD) methods impose a gradient (e.g. thermal or momentum) on a
191 simulation.\cite{ASHURST:1975tg,Evans:1982zk,ERPENBECK:1984sp,MAGINN:1993hc,Berthier:2002ij,Evans:2002ai,Schelling:2002dp,PhysRevA.34.1449,JiangHao_jp802942v}
192 However, the resulting flux is often difficult to
193 measure. Furthermore, problems arise for NEMD simulations of
194 heterogeneous systems, such as phase-phase boundaries or interfaces,
195 where the type of gradient to enforce at the boundary between
196 materials is unclear.
197
198 {\it Reverse} Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics (RNEMD) methods adopt
199 a different approach in that an unphysical {\it flux} is imposed
200 between different regions or ``slabs'' of the simulation
201 box.\cite{MullerPlathe:1997xw,ISI:000080382700030,Kuang2010} The
202 system responds by developing a temperature or momentum {\it gradient}
203 between the two regions. Since the amount of the applied flux is known
204 exactly, and the measurement of a gradient is generally less
205 complicated, imposed-flux methods typically take shorter simulation
206 times to obtain converged results for transport properties. The
207 corresponding temperature or velocity gradients which develop in
208 response to the applied flux are then related (via linear response
209 theory) to the transport coefficient of interest. These methods are
210 quite efficient, in that they do not need many trajectories to provide
211 information about transport properties. To date, they have been
212 utilized in computing thermal and mechanical transfer of both
213 homogeneous
214 liquids~\cite{MullerPlathe:1997xw,ISI:000080382700030,Maginn:2010} as
215 well as heterogeneous
216 systems.\cite{garde:nl2005,garde:PhysRevLett2009,kuang:AuThl}
217
218 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
219 % VSS-RNEMD
220 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
221 \subsection{VSS-RNEMD}
222 The original ``swapping'' approaches by M\"{u}ller-Plathe {\it et
223 al.}\cite{ISI:000080382700030,MullerPlathe:1997xw} can be understood
224 as a sequence of imaginary elastic collisions between particles in
225 regions separated by half of the simulation cell. In each collision,
226 the entire momentum vectors of both particles may be exchanged to
227 generate a thermal flux. Alternatively, a single component of the
228 momentum vectors may be exchanged to generate a shear flux. This
229 algorithm turns out to be quite useful in many simulations of bulk
230 liquids. However, the M\"{u}ller-Plathe swapping approach perturbs the
231 system away from ideal Maxwell-Boltzmann distributions, which has
232 undesirable side-effects when the applied flux becomes
233 large.\cite{Maginn:2010}
234
235 The most useful alternative RNEMD approach developed so far utilizes a
236 series of simultaneous velocity shearing and scaling (VSS) exchanges between
237 the two slabs.\cite{Kuang2012} This method provides a set of
238 conservation constraints while simultaneously creating a desired flux
239 between the two slabs. Satisfying the constraint equations ensures
240 that the new configurations are sampled from the same NVE ensemble.
241
242 The VSS moves are applied periodically to scale and shift the particle
243 velocities ($\mathbf{v}_i$ and $\mathbf{v}_j$) in two slabs ($H$ and
244 $C$) which are separated by half of the simulation box,
245 \begin{displaymath}
246 \begin{array}{rclcl}
247
248 & \underline{\mathrm{shearing}} & &
249 \underline{~~~~~~~~~~~~\mathrm{scaling}~~~~~~~~~~~~} \\ \\
250 \mathbf{v}_i \leftarrow &
251 \mathbf{a}_c\ & + & c\cdot\left(\mathbf{v}_i - \langle\mathbf{v}_c
252 \rangle\right) + \langle\mathbf{v}_c\rangle \\
253 \mathbf{v}_j \leftarrow &
254 \mathbf{a}_h & + & h\cdot\left(\mathbf{v}_j - \langle\mathbf{v}_h
255 \rangle\right) + \langle\mathbf{v}_h\rangle .
256
257 \end{array}
258 \end{displaymath}
259 Here $\langle\mathbf{v}_c\rangle$ and $\langle\mathbf{v}_h\rangle$ are
260 the center of mass velocities in the $C$ and $H$ slabs, respectively.
261 Within the two slabs, particles receive incremental changes or a
262 ``shear'' to their velocities. The amount of shear is governed by the
263 imposed momentum flux, $\mathbf{j}_z(\mathbf{p})$
264 \begin{eqnarray}
265 \mathbf{a}_c & = & - \mathbf{j}_z(\mathbf{p}) \Delta t / M_c \label{vss1}\\
266 \mathbf{a}_h & = & + \mathbf{j}_z(\mathbf{p}) \Delta t / M_h \label{vss2}
267 \end{eqnarray}
268 where $M_{\{c,h\}}$ is the total mass of particles within each of the
269 slabs and $\Delta t$ is the interval between two separate operations.
270
271 To simultaneously impose a thermal flux ($J_z$) between the slabs we
272 use energy conservation constraints,
273 \begin{eqnarray}
274 K_c - J_z\Delta t & = & c^2 (K_c - \frac{1}{2}M_c \langle\mathbf{v}_c
275 \rangle^2) + \frac{1}{2}M_c (\langle \mathbf{v}_c \rangle + \mathbf{a}_c)^2 \label{vss3}\\
276 K_h + J_z\Delta t & = & h^2 (K_h - \frac{1}{2}M_h \langle\mathbf{v}_h
277 \rangle^2) + \frac{1}{2}M_h (\langle \mathbf{v}_h \rangle +
278 \mathbf{a}_h)^2 \label{vss4}.
279 \label{constraint}
280 \end{eqnarray}
281 Simultaneous solution of these quadratic formulae for the scaling
282 coefficients, $c$ and $h$, will ensure that the simulation samples from
283 the original microcanonical (NVE) ensemble. Here $K_{\{c,h\}}$ is the
284 instantaneous translational kinetic energy of each slab. At each time
285 interval, it is a simple matter to solve for $c$, $h$, $\mathbf{a}_c$,
286 and $\mathbf{a}_h$, subject to the imposed momentum flux,
287 $j_z(\mathbf{p})$, and thermal flux, $J_z$, values. Since the VSS
288 operations do not change the kinetic energy due to orientational
289 degrees of freedom or the potential energy of a system, configurations
290 after the VSS move have exactly the same energy (and linear
291 momentum) as before the move.
292
293 As the simulation progresses, the VSS moves are performed on a regular
294 basis, and the system develops a thermal or velocity gradient in
295 response to the applied flux. Using the slope of the temperature or
296 velocity gradient, it is quite simple to obtain the thermal
297 conductivity ($\lambda$),
298 \begin{equation}
299 J_z = -\lambda \frac{\partial T}{\partial z},
300 \end{equation}
301 and shear viscosity ($\eta$),
302 \begin{equation}
303 j_z(p_x) = -\eta \frac{\partial \langle v_x \rangle}{\partial z}.
304 \end{equation}
305 Here, the quantities on the left hand side are the imposed flux
306 values, while the slopes are obtained from linear fits to the
307 gradients that develop in the simulated system.
308
309 The VSS-RNEMD approach is versatile in that it may be used to
310 implement both thermal and shear transport either separately or
311 simultaneously. Perturbations of velocities away from the ideal
312 Maxwell-Boltzmann distributions are minimal, as is thermal anisotropy.
313 This ability to generate simultaneous thermal and shear fluxes has
314 been previously utilized to map out the shear viscosity of SPC/E water
315 over a wide range of temperatures (90~K) with a single 1 ns
316 simulation.\cite{Kuang2012}
317
318 \begin{figure}
319 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/rnemd}
320 \caption{The VSS-RNEMD approach imposes unphysical transfer of
321 linear momentum or kinetic energy between a ``hot'' slab and a
322 ``cold'' slab in the simulation box. The system responds to this
323 imposed flux by generating velocity or temperature gradients. The
324 slope of the gradients can then be used to compute transport
325 properties (e.g. shear viscosity or thermal conductivity).}
326 \label{fig:rnemd}
327 \end{figure}
328
329 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
330 % INTERFACIAL CONDUCTANCE
331 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
332 \subsection{Reverse Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics approaches
333 to interfacial transport}
334
335 Interfaces between dissimilar materials have transport properties
336 which can be defined as derivatives of the standard transport
337 coefficients in a direction normal to the interface. For example, the
338 {\it interfacial} thermal conductance ($G$) can be thought of as the
339 change in the thermal conductivity ($\lambda$) across the boundary
340 between materials:
341 \begin{align}
342 G &= \left(\nabla\lambda \cdot \mathbf{\hat{n}}\right)_{z_0} \\
343 &= J_z\left(\frac{\partial^2 T}{\partial z^2}\right)_{z_0} \Big/
344 \left(\frac{\partial T}{\partial z}\right)_{z_0}^2.
345 \label{derivativeG}
346 \end{align}
347 where $z_0$ is the location of the interface between two materials and
348 $\mathbf{\hat{n}}$ is a unit vector normal to the interface (assumed
349 to be the $z$ direction from here on). RNEMD simulations, and
350 particularly the VSS-RNEMD approach, function by applying a momentum
351 or thermal flux and watching the gradient response of the
352 material. This means that the {\it interfacial} conductance is a
353 second derivative property which is subject to significant noise and
354 therefore requires extensive sampling. Previous work has demonstrated
355 the use of the second derivative approach to compute interfacial
356 conductance at chemically-modified metal / solvent interfaces.
357 However, a definition of the interfacial conductance in terms of a
358 temperature difference ($\Delta T$) measured at $z_0$,
359 \begin{displaymath}
360 G = \frac{J_z}{\Delta T_{z_0}},
361 \end{displaymath}
362 is useful once the RNEMD approach has generated a stable temperature
363 gap across the interface.
364
365 \begin{figure}
366 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/resistor_series}
367 \caption{The inverse of the interfacial thermal conductance, $G$, is
368 the Kapitza resistance, $R_K$. Because the gold / thiolate /
369 solvent interface extends a significant distance from the metal
370 surface, the interfacial resistance $R_K$ can be computed by
371 summing a series of temperature drops between adjacent temperature
372 bins along the $z$ axis.}
373 \label{fig:resistor_series}
374 \end{figure}
375
376 In the particular case we are studying here, there are two interfaces
377 involved in the transfer of heat from the gold slab to the solvent:
378 the metal / thiolate interface and the thiolate / solvent interface. We
379 can treat the temperature on each side of an interface as discrete,
380 making the interfacial conductance the inverse of the Kaptiza
381 resistance, or $G = \frac{1}{R_k}$. To model the total conductance
382 across multiple interfaces, it is useful to think of the interfaces as
383 a set of resistors wired in series. The total resistance is then
384 additive, $R_{total} = \sum_i R_{i}$, and the interfacial conductance
385 is the inverse of the total resistance, or $G = \frac{1}{\sum_i
386 R_i}$). In the interfacial region, we treat each bin in the
387 VSS-RNEMD temperature profile as a resistor with resistance
388 $\frac{T_{2}-T_{1}}{J_z}$, $\frac{T_{3}-T_{2}}{J_z}$, etc. The sum of
389 the set of resistors which spans the gold / thiolate interface, thiolate
390 chains, and thiolate / solvent interface simplifies to
391 \begin{equation}
392 R_{K} = \frac{T_{n}-T_{1}}{J_z},
393 \label{eq:finalG}
394 \end{equation}
395 or the temperature difference between the gold side of the
396 gold / thiolate interface and the solvent side of the thiolate / solvent
397 interface over the applied flux.
398
399
400 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
401 % **COMPUTATIONAL DETAILS**
402 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
403 \section{Computational Details}
404
405 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
406 % FORCE-FIELD PARAMETERS
407 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
408 \subsection{Force-Field Parameters}
409
410 Our simulations include a number of chemically distinct components.
411 Figure \ref{fig:structures} demonstrates the sites defined for both
412 the {\it n}-hexane and alkanethiolate ligands present in our
413 simulations.
414
415 \begin{figure}
416 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/structures}
417 \caption{Topologies of the thiolate capping agents and solvent
418 utilized in the simulations. The chemically-distinct sites (S,
419 \ce{CH2}, and \ce{CH3}) are treated as united atoms. Most
420 parameters are taken from references \bibpunct{}{}{,}{n}{}{,}
421 \protect\cite{TraPPE-UA.alkanes} and
422 \protect\cite{TraPPE-UA.thiols}. Cross-interactions with the Au
423 atoms were adapted from references
424 \protect\cite{landman:1998},~\protect\cite{vlugt:cpc2007154},~and
425 \protect\cite{hautman:4994}.}
426 \label{fig:structures}
427 \end{figure}
428
429 The Au-Au interactions in the metal lattice slab were described by the
430 quantum Sutton-Chen (QSC) formulation.\cite{PhysRevB.59.3527} The QSC
431 potentials include zero-point quantum corrections and are
432 reparametrized for accurate surface energies compared to the
433 Sutton-Chen potentials.\cite{Chen90}
434
435 For the {\it n}-hexane solvent molecules, the TraPPE-UA
436 parameters\cite{TraPPE-UA.alkanes} were utilized. In this model,
437 sites are located at the carbon centers for alkyl groups. Bonding
438 interactions, including bond stretches and bends and torsions, were
439 used for intra-molecular sites closer than 3 bonds. For non-bonded
440 interactions, Lennard-Jones potentials were used. We have previously
441 utilized both united atom (UA) and all-atom (AA) force fields for
442 thermal conductivity,\cite{kuang:AuThl,Kuang2012} and since the united
443 atom force fields cannot populate the high-frequency modes that are
444 present in AA force fields, they appear to work better for modeling
445 thermal conductivity. The TraPPE-UA model for alkanes is known to
446 predict a slightly lower boiling point than experimental values. This
447 is one of the reasons we used a lower average temperature (220 K) for
448 our simulations.
449
450 The TraPPE-UA force field includes parameters for thiol
451 molecules\cite{TraPPE-UA.thiols} which were used for the
452 alkanethiolate molecules in our simulations. To derive suitable
453 parameters for butanethiolate adsorbed on Au(111) surfaces, we adopted
454 the S parameters from Luedtke and Landman\cite{landman:1998} and
455 modified the parameters for the CTS atom to maintain charge neutrality
456 in the molecule.
457
458 To describe the interactions between metal (Au) and non-metal atoms,
459 we refer to an adsorption study of alkyl thiols on gold surfaces by
460 Vlugt {\it et al.}\cite{vlugt:cpc2007154} They fitted an effective
461 Lennard-Jones form of potential parameters for the interaction between
462 Au and pseudo-atoms CH$_x$ and S based on a well-established and
463 widely-used effective potential of Hautman and Klein for the Au(111)
464 surface.\cite{hautman:4994} As our simulations require the gold slab
465 to be flexible to accommodate thermal excitation, the pair-wise form
466 of potentials they developed was used for our study.
467
468 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
469 % SIMULATION PROTOCOL
470 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
471 \subsection{Simulation Protocol}
472
473 We have implemented the VSS-RNEMD algorithm in OpenMD, our group
474 molecular dynamics code.\cite{openmd} An 1188 atom gold slab was
475 prepared and equilibrated at 1 atm and 200 K. The periodic box was
476 then expanded in the $z$ direction to expose two Au(111) faces on
477 either side of the 11-layer slab.
478
479 A full monolayer of thiolates (1/3 the number of surface gold atoms)
480 was placed on three-fold hollow sites on the gold interfaces. The
481 effect of thiolate binding sites on the thermal conductance was tested
482 by placing thiolates at both fcc and hcp hollow sites. No appreciable
483 difference in the temperature profile due to the location of
484 thiolate binding was noted.
485
486 To test the role of thiolate chain length on interfacial thermal
487 conductance, full coverages of each of five chain lengths were tested:
488 butanethiolate (C$_4$), hexanethiolate (C$_6$), octanethiolate
489 (C$_8$), decanethiolate (C$_{10}$), and dodecanethiolate
490 (C$_{12}$). To test the effect of mixed chain lengths, full coverages
491 of C$_4$ / C$_{10}$ and C$_4$ / C$_{12}$ mixtures were created in
492 short/long chain percentages of 25/75, 50/50, 62.5/37.5, 75/25, and
493 87.5/12.5. The short and long chains were placed on the surface hollow
494 sites in a random configuration.
495
496 The simulation box $z$-dimension was set to roughly double the length
497 of the gold / thiolate block. Hexane solvent molecules were placed in
498 the vacant portion of the box using the packmol
499 algorithm.\cite{packmol} Figure \ref{fig:timelapse} shows two of the
500 mixed chain length interfaces both before and after the RNEMD simulation.
501
502 \begin{figure}
503 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/timelapse}
504 \caption{Images of 25\%~C$_4$~/~75\%~C$_{12}$ (top panel) and 75\%~C$_4$~/~25\%~C$_{12}$ (bottom panel) interfaces at the beginning and end of 3 ns simulations. Solvent molecules that were initially present in the thiolate layer are colored light blue. Diffusion of the initially-trapped solvent into the bulk is apparent in the interface with fewer long chains. Trapped solvent is orientationally locked to the ordered ligands (and is less able to diffuse into the bulk) when the fraction of long chains increases.}
505 \label{fig:timelapse}
506 \end{figure}
507
508 The system was equilibrated to 220 K in the canonical (NVT) ensemble,
509 allowing the thiolates and solvent to warm gradually. Pressure
510 correction to 1 atm was done using an isobaric-isothermal (NPT)
511 integrator that allowed expansion or contraction only in the $z$
512 direction, maintaining the crystalline structure of the gold as close
513 to the bulk result as possible. The diagonal elements of the pressure
514 tensor were monitored during the pressure equilibration stage. If the
515 $xx$ and/or $yy$ elements had a mean above zero throughout the
516 simulation -- indicating residual surface tension in the plane of the
517 gold slab -- an additional short NPT equilibration step was performed
518 allowing all box dimensions to change. Once the pressure was stable
519 at 1 atm, a final equilibration stage was performed at constant
520 temperature. All systems were equilibrated in the microcanonical (NVE)
521 ensemble before proceeding with the VSS-RNEMD and data collection
522 stages.
523
524 A kinetic energy flux was applied using VSS-RNEMD during a data
525 collection period of 3 nanoseconds, with velocity scaling moves
526 occurring every 10 femtoseconds. The ``hot'' slab was centered in the
527 gold and the ``cold'' slab was placed in the center of the solvent
528 region. The entire system had a (time-averaged) temperature of 220 K,
529 with a temperature difference between the hot and cold slabs of
530 approximately 30 K. The average temperature and kinetic energy flux
531 were selected to avoid solvent freezing (or glass formation) and to
532 prevent the thiolates from burying in the gold slab. The Au-S
533 interaction has a deep potential energy well, which allows sulfur
534 atoms to embed into the gold slab at temperatures above 250 K.
535 Simulation conditions were chosen to avoid both of these
536 situations.
537
538 Temperature profiles of the system were created by dividing the box
539 into $\sim$ 3 \AA \, bins along the $z$ axis and recording the average
540 temperature of each bin.
541
542
543
544 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
545 % **RESULTS**
546 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
547 \section{Results}
548
549 The solvent, hexane, is a straight chain flexible alkane that is structurally
550 similar to the thiolate alkane tails. Previous work has shown that UA models
551 of hexane and butanethiolate have a high degree of vibrational
552 overlap.\cite{kuang:AuThl} This overlap provides a mechanism for thermal
553 energy conduction from the thiolates to the solvent. Indeed, we observe that
554 the interfacial conductance is twice as large with the thiolate monolayers (of
555 all chain lengths) than with the bare metal surface.
556
557 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
558 % CHAIN LENGTH
559 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
560 \subsection{Effect of Chain Length}
561
562 We examined full coverages of five alkyl chain lengths, C$_{4}$, C$_{6}$, C$_{8}$, C$_{10}$, and C$_{12}$. As shown in table \ref{table:chainlengthG}, the interfacial conductance is roughly constant as a function of chain length, indicating that the length of the thiolate alkyl chains does not play a significant role in the transport of heat across the gold/thiolate and thiolate/solvent interfaces. In all cases, the hexane solvent was unable to penetrate into the thiolate layer, leading to a persistent 2-4 \AA \, gap between the solvent region and the thiolates. However, while the identity of the alkyl thiolate capping agent has little effect on the interfacial thermal conductance, the presence of a full monolayer of capping agent provides a two-fold increase in the G value relative to a bare gold surface.
563 \begin{longtable}{p{4cm} p{3cm}}
564 \caption{Computed interfacial thermal conductance ($G$) values for bare gold and 100\% coverages of various thiolate alkyl chain lengths.}
565 \\
566 \centering {\bf Chain Length} & \centering\arraybackslash {\bf G (MW/m$^2$/K)} \\ \hline
567 \endhead
568 \hline
569 \endfoot
570 \centering bare metal & \centering\arraybackslash 30.2 \\
571 $~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~$ C$_{4}$ & \centering\arraybackslash 59.4 \\
572 $~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~$ C$_{6}$ & \centering\arraybackslash 60.2 \\
573 $~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~$ C$_{8}$ & \centering\arraybackslash 61.0 \\
574 $~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~$ C$_{10}$ & \centering\arraybackslash 58.2 \\
575 $~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~$ C$_{12}$ & \centering\arraybackslash 58.8
576 \label{table:chainlengthG}
577 \end{longtable}
578
579 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
580 % MIXED CHAINS
581 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
582 \subsection{Effect of Mixed Chain Lengths}
583
584 Previous simulations have demonstrated non-monotonic behavior for $G$ as a function of the surface coverage. One difficulty with the previous study was the ability of butanethiolate ligands to migrate on the Au(111) surface and to form segregated domains. To simulate the effect of low coverages while preventing thiolate domain formation, we maintain 100\% thiolate coverage while varying the proportions of short (butanethiolate, C$_4$) and long (decanethiolate, C$_{10}$, or dodecanethiolate, C$_{12}$) alkyl chains. Data on the conductance trend as the fraction of long chains was varied is shown in figure \ref{fig:Gstacks}. Note that as in the previous study, $G$ is dependent upon solvent accessibility to thermally excited ligands. Our simulations indicate a similar (but less dramatic) non-monotonic dependence on the fraction of long chains.
585 \begin{figure}
586 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{figures/Gstacks}
587 \caption{Interfacial thermal conductivity of mixed-chains has a non-monotonic dependence on the fraction of long chains (lower panels). At low fractions of long chains, the solvent escape rate ($k_{escape}$) dominates the heat transfer process, while the solvent-thiolate orientational ordering dominates in systems with higher fractions of long chains (upper panels).}
588 \label{fig:Gstacks}
589 \end{figure}
590
591 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
592 % **DISCUSSION**
593 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
594 \section{Discussion}
595
596 In the mixed chain-length simulations, solvent molecules
597 can become temporarily trapped or entangled with the thiolate chains. Their
598 residence in close proximity to the higher temperature environment close to
599 the surface allows them to carry heat away from the surface quite efficiently.
600 There are two aspects of this behavior that are relevant to thermal
601 conductance of the interface: the residence time of solvent molecules in the
602 thiolate layer, and the alignment of solvent molecules with the ligand alkyl
603 chains as a mechanism for transferring vibrational energy to these entrapped
604 solvent molecules. To quantify these competing effects, we have computed
605 solvent escape rates from the thiolate layer as well as a joint orientational
606 order parameter between the trapped solvent and the thiolate ligands.
607
608 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
609 % RESIDENCE TIME
610 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
611 \subsection{Mobility of solvent in the interfacial layer}
612
613 We use a simple survival correlation function, $C(t)$, to measure the
614 residence time of a solvent molecule in the thiolate
615 layer. This function correlates the identity of all hexane molecules
616 within the $z$-coordinate range of the thiolate layer at two separate
617 times. If the solvent molecule is present at both times, the
618 configuration contributes a $1$, while the absence of the molecule at
619 the later time indicates that the solvent molecule has migrated into
620 the bulk, and this configuration contributes a $0$. A steep decay in
621 $C(t)$ indicates a high turnover rate of solvent molecules from the
622 chain region to the bulk. We define the escape rate for trapped solvent molecules at the interface as
623 \begin{equation}
624 k_{escape} = \left( \int_0^T C(t) dt \right)^{-1}
625 \label{eq:mobility}
626 \end{equation}
627 where T is the length of the simulation. This is a direct measure of
628 the rate at which solvent molecules initially entangled in the thiolate layer
629 can escape into the bulk. As $k_{escape} \rightarrow 0$, the
630 solvent becomes permanently trapped in the thiolate layer. In
631 figure \ref{fig:Gstacks} we show that interfacial solvent mobility
632 decreases as the fraction of long thiolate chains increases.
633
634 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
635 % ORDER PARAMETER
636 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
637
638 \subsection{Vibrational coupling via orientational ordering}
639
640 As the fraction of long-chain thiolates increases, the entrapped
641 solvent molecules must find specific orientations relative to the mean
642 orientation of the thiolate chains. This alignment allows for
643 efficient thermal energy exchange between the thiolate alkyl chain and
644 the solvent molecules.
645
646 Once the interfacial solvent molecules have picked up thermal energy from the
647 thiolates, they carry heat away from the gold as they diffuse back
648 into the bulk solvent. When the percentage of long chains decreases,
649 the tails of the long chains are much more disordered and do not
650 provide structured channels for the solvent to fill.
651
652 To measure this cooperative ordering, we compute the orientational order
653 parameters and director axes for both the thiolate chains and for the
654 entrapped solvent. The director axis can be easily obtained by diagonalization
655 of the order parameter tensor,
656 \begin{equation}
657 \mathsf{Q}_{\alpha \beta} = \frac{1}{2 N} \sum_{i=1}^{N} \left( 3 \mathbf{e}_{i
658 \alpha} \mathbf{e}_{i \beta} - \delta_{\alpha \beta} \right)
659 \end{equation}
660 where $\mathbf{e}_{i \alpha}$ is the $\alpha = x,y,z$ component of
661 the unit vector $\mathbf{e}_{i}$ along the long axis of molecule $i$.
662 For both the solvent and the ligand, the $\mathbf{e}$ vector is defined using
663 the terminal atoms of the molecule.
664
665 The largest eigenvalue of $\overleftrightarrow{\mathsf{Q}}$ is
666 traditionally used to obtain the orientational order parameter, while the
667 eigenvector corresponding to the order parameter yields the director
668 axis ($\mathbf{d}(t)$), which defines the average direction of
669 molecular alignment at any time $t$. The overlap between the director
670 axes of the thiolates and the entrapped solvent is time-averaged,
671 \begin{equation}
672 \langle d \rangle = \langle \mathbf{d}_{thiolates} \left( t \right) \cdot
673 \mathbf{d}_{solvent} \left( t \right) \rangle_t
674 \label{eq:orientation}
675 \end{equation}
676 and reported in figure \ref{fig:Gstacks}. Values of $\langle d \rangle$ range from $0$ (solvent molecules in the ligand layer are perpendicular to the thiolate chains) to $1$ (solvent and ligand chains are aligned parallel to each other).
677
678 C$_4$ / C$_{10}$ mixed monolayers have a peak interfacial conductance with 75\% long chains. At this fraction of long chains, the cooperative orientational ordering of the solvent molecules and chains becomes the dominant effect while the solvent escape rate is quite slow. C$_4$ / C$_{12}$ mixtures have a peak interfacial conductance for 87.5\% long chains. The solvent-thiolate orientational ordering reaches its maximum value at this long chain fraction. Long chain fractions of over $0.5$ for the C$_4$ / C$_{12}$ system are well ordered, but this effect is tempered by the exceptionally slow solvent escape rate ($\sim$ 1 molecule / 2 ns).
679
680 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
681 % **CONCLUSIONS**
682 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
683 \section{Conclusions}
684 Our results suggest that a mixed vibrational transfer / convection
685 model may be necessary to explain the features of heat transfer at
686 this interface. The alignment of the solvent chains with the ordered
687 ligand allows rapid transfer of energy to the trapped solvent and
688 becomes the dominant feature for ordered ligand layers. Diffusion of
689 the vibrationally excited solvent into the bulk also plays a
690 significant role when the ligands are less tightly packed.
691
692 In the language of earlier continuum approaches to interfacial
693 conductance,\cite{RevModPhys.61.605} the alignment of the chains is an
694 important factor in the transfer of phonons from the thiolate layer to the
695 trapped solvent. The aligned solvent and thiolate chains have nearly identical
696 acoustic impedances and the phonons can scatter directly into a solvent
697 molecule that has been forced into alignment. When the entrapped solvent has
698 more configurations available, the likelihood of an impedance mismatch is
699 higher, and the phonon scatters into the solvent with lower
700 efficiency. The fractional coverage of the long chains is therefore a simple
701 way of tuning the acoustic mismatch between the thiolate layer and the hexane
702 solvent.
703
704 Efficient heat transfer also can be accomplished via convective or diffusive motion of vibrationally excited solvent back into the bulk. Once the entrapped solvent becomes too tightly aligned with the ligands, however, the convective avenue of heat transfer is cut off.
705
706 Our simulations suggest a number of routes to make interfaces with high thermal conductance. If it is possible to create an interface which forces the solvent into alignment with a ligand that shares many of the solvent's vibrational modes, while simultaneously preserving the ability of the solvent to diffuse back into the bulk, we would expect a significant jump in the interfacial conductance. One possible way to accomplish this is to use polyene ligands with alternating unsaturated bonds. These are significantly more rigid than long alkanes, and could force solvent alignment (even at low relative coverages) while preserving mobility of solvent molecules within the ligand layer.
707
708 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
709 % **ACKNOWLEDGMENTS**
710 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
711 \section*{Acknowledgments}
712
713 We gratefully acknowledge conversations with Dr. Shenyu Kuang. Support for
714 this project was provided by the National Science Foundation under grant
715 CHE-0848243. Computational time was provided by the Center for Research
716 Computing (CRC) at the University of Notre Dame.
717
718 \newpage
719
720 \bibliography{thiolsRNEMD}
721
722 \end{doublespace}
723 \end{document}
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