Thermal Conductivity of Graded Composites: Numerical
Simulations and an Effective Medium Approximation
P. M. Hui (Chinese U. of Hong Kong), X. Zhang (Qwest Communications),
Alan J. Markworth (Dep't of Materials Science, Ohio State Univ.), and
D. Stroud (Dep't of Physics, Ohio State Univ.)
We describe two methods for modeling the thermal conductivity and temperature
profile in a graded composite film. The film consists of a
random binary composite, whose concentration varies in the direction
perpendicular to the film surface, and a fixed temperature difference
is applied across the film. In the first
method, the temperature profile is modeled directly, using a finite element
technique in which the film is represented as a discrete network of thermal
conductances, randomly distributed according to the assumed composition
profile. The temperature at each node, and the effective thermal conductance,
is then obtained by a transfer matrix technique. In the second approach,
the film is treated by an effective-medium approximation, suitably generalized
to account for the composition gradient. The methods are in rough agreement
with each other, and suggest that thermophysical properties of the film can
be treated reasonably well by approaches generalized from those which succeed
in conventional composites.