by KeAi Communications Co.
As electronic devices become increasingly miniaturized, heat management at the nanoscale emerges as a challenge, especially for devices operating in sub-microns. Traditional heat conduction models fail to capture the complex behavior of thermal transfer at this scale, where phonons—vibrational energy carriers in the lattice structure—dominate.
In particular, there are two key obstacles to address in phonon-based heat simulation. One is the reliance on empirical parameters, which limits the model’s adaptability across different materials, while the other is the enormous computational resources required for three-dimensional (3D) simulations.
In a study published by a team of researchers from Shanghai Jiaotong University, led by thermophysics professor Hua Bao, a novel computational method addressing these challenges is reported. The work is published in the journal Fundamental Research.
“When device sizes shrink to scales comparable to the phonon mean free path, the classical Fourier law no longer applies,” explains Bao. “To model heat conduction accurately, we must use the phonon Boltzmann transport equation (BTE). That said, solving this equation efficiently for 3D structures has been a challenge.”
Nonetheless, by applying Fermi’s golden rule to precisely calculate the necessary parameters from first principles, the team successfully eliminated the need for empirical parameters. This breakthrough allows the model to be applied across a wide range of materials while maintaining high accuracy.
Further, the introduction of advanced numerical algorithms dramatically boosts simulation efficiency. For instance, a 3D FinFET device with 13 million degrees of freedom, which previously would have required hundreds of CPU cores over several hours, can now be simulated in under two hours on a regular desktop computer.
“Our method not only reduces computational costs but also enables accurate thermal simulations for complex nanoscale structures, providing critical insights for designing materials with specific thermal properties and accurately resolving temperature profiles at the transistor level,” says Bao.
In addition to the algorithmic improvements, the team developed GiftBTE, an open-source software platform designed to facilitate further advancements in sub-micron heat transfer simulation. The researchers hope their approach will pave the way for future studies and real-world applications in nanoelectronics and thermophysics.
“We believe our work will encourage other scientists to explore new applications for BTE-based simulations, particularly in complex multi-physical scenarios like electro-thermal coupling in devices,” Bao adds.
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KeAi Communications Co.