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1 sound speeds usually exhibits higher lattice thermal conductivity.
2 oundaries contribute nearly one-third of the thermal conductivity.
3 at point defects typically lower the lattice thermal conductivity.
4 , plays the dominant role in determining the thermal conductivity.
5 so provide a path to dynamically control the thermal conductivity.
6 within the SnTe matrix, thereby reducing the thermal conductivity.
7  how a phase transition affects the measured thermal conductivity.
8 the challenges in characterizing anisotropic thermal conductivity.
9 ing, but has negligible influence on lattice thermal conductivity.
10 t causes the additional reduction of lattice thermal conductivity.
11 have been developed to establish the reduced thermal conductivity.
12 nd long-wavelength phonons thus reducing the thermal conductivity.
13 ables nanostructuring, which greatly reduces thermal conductivity.
14 led pore sizes and distributions to suppress thermal conductivity.
15 sults in the added benefit of increasing the thermal conductivity.
16 any, connection between relaxation times and thermal conductivity.
17  largely been based on decreasing the phonon thermal conductivity.
18 re found to be responsible for a low lattice thermal conductivity.
19 dimensional hyperchannels for electrical and thermal conductivity.
20  acoustic phonons to achieve the low lattice thermal conductivity.
21 of low density, ease of processing, and high thermal conductivity.
22 tes, enabled by their extremely low mass and thermal conductivity.
23 s into the microscopic origins of their high thermal conductivity.
24 re simultaneously high power factors and low thermal conductivities.
25 rmonic lattice dynamics underlying their low thermal conductivities.
26 anocrystal solids generally possess very low thermal conductivities.
27 d velocity of SnTe to give glasslike lattice thermal conductivities.
28 ion is responsible for intrinsic low lattice thermal conductivities.
29 es between high (0.35 W m(-1) K(-1)) and low thermal conductivity (0.10 W m(-1) K(-1)) states.
30 of ~ 93%), good UV-blocking ability, and low thermal conductivity (0.24 W m(-1)K(-1)) based on a proc
31 's modulus (200% increase at 9 wt% BNNT) and thermal conductivity (120% increase at 9 wt% BNNT) witho
32 , we achieve a approximately 25x increase in thermal conductivity (4.7 +/- 0.2 Wm(-1)K(-1)) over the
33 -W) that exhibits two- to threefold enhanced thermal conductivity (62 +/- 2.28 W m(-1) K(-1) for gall
34 oms in the large cages results in a very low thermal conductivity, a unique feature of the clathrate
35         In this work, we show that the local thermal conductivity along a single Si nanowire can be t
36 s an unprecedented combination of metal-like thermal conductivity, an elastic compliance similar to s
37  enhancement in the optical transparency and thermal conductivity, an exceptionally lower-level of el
38 ed porosities, effective elastic properties, thermal conductivities and permeabilities of reticulite
39                                   Calculated thermal conductivity and diffusivity of the different fl
40 ematic data set allows for constraining both thermal conductivity and equation-of-state models.
41 osites with enhanced mechanical strength and thermal conductivity and furthermore tunable piezoelectr
42                       The combination of low thermal conductivity and good transport properties resul
43 e a suitable T(c) , coupled with anisotropic thermal conductivity and hard magnetic properties.
44 -of-the-art thermoelectric material with low thermal conductivity and high thermoelectric (TE) perfor
45 rmoelectrics owing to their ultralow lattice thermal conductivity and high thermoelectric figure of m
46 daries, has been shown to reduce the lattice thermal conductivity and improve the thermoelectric perf
47                                          The thermal conductivity and interface thermal conductance o
48  are responsible for the remarkable drops in thermal conductivity and large thermal resistances in ca
49    The electrolyte-gating-induced changes in thermal conductivity and lattice dimensions are reversib
50 ing Purgatorio model or Sesame S27314 for Al thermal conductivity and LEOS for Au/Al release equation
51 ations that require materials with both high thermal conductivity and low mechanical stiffness.
52 by using the temperature-dependent models of thermal conductivity and mass diffusion coefficient.
53 ermine the optimal conditions, i.e., maximum thermal conductivity and minimum nanofluid viscosity, ba
54 gly, it is found that both the through-plane thermal conductivity and the Al/TMD interface conductanc
55 d promising thermoelectric properties, their thermal conductivity and the silver content dependence r
56 eling and multiobjective optimization of the thermal conductivity and viscosity of water-based spinel
57 y a wide optical transparency window, a high thermal conductivity, and an extraordinary robustness du
58  electrical conductivity, kappa is the total thermal conductivity, and T is the absolute temperature.
59  affected by reduced mechanical dissipation, thermal conductivity, and thermal capacity.
60 ess excellent photothermal property with low thermal conductivity, and thus is an ideal candidate for
61                                          The thermal conductivities approach the theoretical minimum
62 hermal properties because sound velocity and thermal conductivity are linearly proportional according
63 PE)/graphene nanocomposite films with a high thermal conductivity are successfully fabricated by solu
64                      This leads to a lattice thermal conductivity as low as 0.4 Wm(-1) K(-1) and a hi
65 weakly bound substructures, exhibits lattice thermal conductivity as low as ca. 0.5 W/mK near room te
66   At the same time, the small electrical and thermal conductivities at high temperatures imply that n
67 ptionally high power factors and low lattice thermal conductivities at room temperature.
68 iquid-like TE materials that exhibit lattice thermal conductivity at lower than the amorphous limit d
69 rials at bulk length-scales, engineering the thermal conductivity at micro- and nano-scale dimensions
70 Interestingly, MoS(2) films also display low thermal conductivity at room temperature and strongly fa
71 phonon transport and to derive the intrinsic thermal conductivity at the thermal equilibrium limit.
72             It was found that the calculated thermal conductivity at two temperatures, 40 and 730 deg
73            Hf2CO2 is determined to exhibit a thermal conductivity better than MoS2 and phosphorene.
74 This presents new avenues to control lattice thermal conductivity, beyond phonon scattering.
75 on, which not only significantly reduced the thermal conductivity but also mitigated a segregation ef
76    Notably, Ti2CO2 presents relatively lower thermal conductivity but much higher carrier mobility th
77 studies have shown polymers can achieve high thermal conductivity, but the transport mechanisms have
78 iffusivity is even more greatly reduced than thermal conductivity by adsorption.
79  the large phonon shifts directly affect the thermal conductivity by altering both the phonon scatter
80 20 K to 320 K, and demonstrate their tunable thermal conductivity by varying the length of alkyl chai
81 anol exhibited a significant increase in the thermal conductivity (by approximately 50%) relative to
82                          Here we move beyond thermal conductivity calculations and provide a rigorous
83                                          The thermal conductivity can be dynamically varied by a fact
84                           We find that their thermal conductivity can be tuned by atomic mass modific
85                              Dependencies of thermal conductivity coefficient of coatings, MIM interf
86                                          Its thermal conductivity critically affects Earth's thermal
87 cs, molecular dynamics (MD) and experimental thermal conductivity data, we back-calculated the phonon
88 nlet and a valve that transfers the H2S to a thermal conductivity detector (TCD), enables a precise h
89 lution were detected by a gas chromatography-thermal conductivity detector and ion chromatography, re
90 plications yet are limited by their moderate thermal conductivity, difficulty in surface-spreading, a
91                A drastic decrease in lattice thermal conductivity down below the minimum value of the
92 ugh either a significantly depressed lattice thermal conductivity down to its theoretical minimum val
93 -type semiconductor with extraordinarily low thermal conductivity due to displacement or "rattling" o
94 standing and measuring temperature-dependent thermal conductivity during phase transitions are import
95 ransport pathways in the HSMs to lower their thermal conductivities efficiently.
96 onic devices are also discussed, such as the thermal conductivity, electric transportation, electroni
97 -SSWC provides superior vapour permeability, thermal conductivity, electrical insulation and anticorr
98 printed porous evaporator with intrinsic low thermal conductivity enables heat localization and effec
99     The recent observation of unusually high thermal conductivity exceeding 1000 W m(-1) K(-1) in sin
100 lene fibers and oriented films with uniaxial thermal conductivity exceeding 50 [Formula: see text] ha
101 phase-change materials relies on adding high thermal-conductivity fillers to improve the thermal-diff
102 eshes of the same average pitch, and reduced thermal conductivities for nanomeshes with smaller pitch
103 We measure identical (within 6% uncertainty) thermal conductivities for periodic and aperiodic nanome
104 ion between lattice dynamics and an ultralow thermal conductivity for series CsSnBr(3-x)I(x) reaching
105                         We first compute the thermal conductivity for the case with aligned circular
106  and design crystalline solids with ultralow thermal conductivity for various applications including
107 d thus provides a novel strategy to engineer thermal conductivity for various applications.
108                    Intrinsically low lattice thermal conductivity ([Formula: see text]) in superionic
109 e have used torque magnetization to 45 T and thermal conductivity [Formula: see text] to construct th
110 locons contribute more than 10% to the total thermal conductivity from 400 K to 800 K and they are la
111 d problem, where one can now calculate their thermal conductivity from first principles using express
112 d composite NPs into the matrix improves the thermal conductivity, from 0.205 Wm(-1)K(-1) for neat ny
113 persion of salinity and temperature, and the thermal conductivity greatly affected pore water signals
114 that the inclusion of particles with a lower thermal conductivity has a significant influence on the
115  grain boundary scattering and its effect on thermal conductivity has impeded efforts to improve the
116     Crystalline solids exhibiting glass-like thermal conductivity have attracted substantial attentio
117                 Polymer composites with high thermal conductivity have recently attracted much attent
118 nt light absorbability, wood matrix with low thermal conductivity, hierarchical micro- and nanochanne
119 nI3 possesses a rare combination of ultralow thermal conductivity, high electrical conductivity (282
120 lline inorganic solids that exhibit ultralow thermal conductivity, high mechanical stability, and goo
121 t the observation of ultralow and glass-like thermal conductivity in a hexagonal perovskite chalcogen
122                                 The ultralow thermal conductivity in alpha-MgAgSb is attributed to it
123 h phonon-anharmonic-induced ultralow lattice thermal conductivity in alpha-MgAgSb.
124     This work shines new light on studies of thermal conductivity in fields of energy materials, micr
125 resence of adsorbates increases or decreases thermal conductivity in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs)
126  resonance confinement to the abnormal lower thermal conductivity in the MIM metamaterial with Ag lay
127 n scattering centers, leading to low lattice thermal conductivity in the printed n-type material.
128 vity of 5.48 x 10(3) S m(-1), relatively low thermal conductivity in the range of 1.5 to 2 W m(-1) K(
129                      To minimize the lattice thermal conductivity in thermoelectrics, strategies typi
130 lue of ca. 0.66(6) ps, resulting in ultralow thermal conductivity in TlInTe(2) .
131 c phonons that likely causes the low lattice thermal conductivity in TlInTe2.
132  domain thermoreflectance (FDTR), we measure thermal conductivity in two series of SACs: the unary co
133 tress at 1400 degrees C, as well as ultralow thermal conductivity in vacuum [~2.4 milliwatts per mete
134                           In particular, the thermal conductivity increases significantly with proton
135 y diffraction measurements, we attribute the thermal conductivity increases to the crystal growth and
136 hed mechanisms, the unusually low electronic thermal conductivity is a signature of the absence of qu
137      The influence of micro/nanostructure on thermal conductivity is a topic of great scientific inte
138                                              Thermal conductivity is a very basic property that deter
139                 This threefold change in the thermal conductivity is achieved by modulation of chain
140                                     The high thermal conductivity is attributed to the pai-pai intera
141                        The measured in-plane thermal conductivity is exceptionally high, 2292 +/- 159
142                                          Low thermal conductivity is favorable for preserving the tem
143                                 The in-plane thermal conductivity is higher along the Re-chains, (70
144                      As a result, the system thermal conductivity is lowered to a greater extent than
145                                              Thermal conductivity is one of the most crucial physical
146                       In the superfluid, the thermal conductivity is only weakly temperature dependen
147                                  The lattice thermal conductivity is the lowest among state-of-the-ar
148 e weak interlayer bonding, the through-plane thermal conductivity is the lowest observed to date for
149                              The cross-plane thermal conductivity (k) of beta-W films is determined a
150 ynamics of phonon transport, which constrain thermal conductivity (k) to decrease monotonically with
151                 A power law for the sample's thermal conductivity kappa = (8.7 +/- 0.3) x 10(-5) T (1
152 rent phonons and thereby reduces the lattice thermal conductivity kappa l .
153                       We investigate lattice thermal conductivity kappa of MgSiO3 perovskite (pv) by
154 , we discover intrinsically ultralow lattice thermal conductivity (kappa(L)) in the single crystal of
155  and exhibits intrinsically ultralow lattice thermal conductivity (kappa(L)) of 0.62-0.4 W/mK in the
156                     We show ultralow lattice thermal conductivity (kappa(L)) of 0.74-0.47 W/mK in the
157  GeTe possesses significantly higher lattice thermal conductivity (kappa(latt)) compared to that of i
158 in large quantities, with high porosity, low thermal conductivity (kappa) and excellent figure of mer
159 rement of the impact of encapsulation on the thermal conductivity (kappa) and thermopower (S) of sing
160                          Materials with high thermal conductivity (kappa) are of technological import
161 pon Bi4O4Cu1.7Se2.7Cl0.3: a room-temperature thermal conductivity (kappa) of 0.4(1) W/mK was measured
162 g thermal materials usually possess specific thermal conductivity (kappa), forming a digital set of k
163 r ) in the order of 10(11) , and anisotropic thermal conductivity (kappa|| /kappa perpendicular ) of
164                                     Many low-thermal-conductivity (kappa(L)) crystals show intriguing
165 cause a non-monotonic pressure dependence of thermal conductivity, kappa, which first increases simil
166  primary strategy for minimizing the lattice thermal conductivity (kappaL ) in thermoelectric materia
167 tric performance of GeTe is the high lattice thermal conductivity (kappalat).
168 ical conductivity, thermopower, and moderate thermal conductivities led to the optimized TE performan
169 es of 1000 K these compounds exhibit lattice thermal conductivity less than 1 W/mK.
170  work suggest an opportunity to discover low thermal conductivity materials among unexplored inorgani
171                        In the pursuit of low thermal conductivity materials for thermal management, o
172 contrast to the conventional wisdom that low thermal conductivity materials should be explored in the
173 g dielectric permittivity, heat capacity and thermal conductivity measured down to 66 mK, to reveal t
174                      By performing transient thermal conductivity measurements at 94 degrees C, we fi
175 arsenide single crystals have been grown and thermal conductivity measurements have verified the rela
176                    Here we present the first thermal conductivity measurements of aluminum at 0.5-2.7
177 beck coefficient, electrical resistivity and thermal conductivity measurements were performed.
178                            We complement our thermal-conductivity measurements with mechanical nanoin
179 moelectric materials, there are two main low thermal conductivity mechanisms: the phonon anharmonic i
180 p with an Arduino logger, a pressure sensor, thermal conductivity methane sensor, and a solenoid valv
181 unction, enabling new avenues for systematic thermal conductivity minimization and potentially accele
182  mass transfer rates, while their remarkable thermal conductivity minimizes hot spots and thermal gra
183                          Here, we report the thermal conductivities of Ag(3.9)Sb(33.6)Te(62.5) and Ag
184                      The measurements of the thermal conductivities of bulk TMDs serve as an importan
185 ts, the reported clathrates exhibit ultralow thermal conductivities of less than 1 W.m(-1).K(-1) at r
186                    Here we directly measured thermal conductivities of solid Fe and Fe-Si alloys up t
187             Here, we report ultralow lattice thermal conductivities of solution-synthesized, single-c
188                       However, the effective thermal conductivities of such mixing-based thermal meta
189                We report on the out-of-plane thermal conductivities of tetragonal L10 FePt (001) easy
190 cumented results reveals the relationship of thermal conductivities of the HSMs and the size and dens
191 unlike the varying temperature trends in the thermal conductivities of the two phases, the electronic
192                  The anisotropic basal-plane thermal conductivities of thin black phosphorus obtained
193                                    We obtain thermal conductivities of up to 1.7 Wm(-1) K(-1) that ex
194 r thermoelectric semiconductors with lattice thermal conductivity of 0.4-1.5 W m(-1) K(-1).
195 lows from its T(c) of 450 K, together with a thermal conductivity of 20 W m(-1) K(-1) , make Rh(2) Co
196     Electrical conductivity of 38.512 M.S/m, thermal conductivity of 264 W.m(-1).K(-1) and microhardn
197 ere we report polyethylene films with a high thermal conductivity of 62 Wm(-1) K(-1), over two orders
198  are largely responsible for the increase in thermal conductivity of a-SiO2 above room temperature.
199 s, but single crystals show very low lattice thermal conductivity of about 4 W m(-1) K(-1) at room te
200 aling at 160 degrees C, the room-temperature thermal conductivity of Ag(3.9)Sb(33.6)Te(62.5) and AgSb
201  of silver contents has little impact on the thermal conductivity of Ag(3.9)Sb(33.6)Te(62.5) and lead
202 62.5) and leads to a strong reduction in the thermal conductivity of AgSbTe(2) thin films.
203    Here, we studied the ultralow-temperature thermal conductivity of an effective spin-1/2 triangular
204 hermal insulation relies on the reduction of thermal conductivity of appropriate materials that are e
205 rst-principles calculations predict that the thermal conductivity of boron arsenide is second only to
206 scattering that induces the ultralow lattice thermal conductivity of CsSnBr(3-x)I(x).
207 sure both the in-plane and the through-plane thermal conductivity of four kinds of layered TMDs (MoS2
208                                     The high thermal conductivity of graphene and few-layer graphene
209 present study, we take advantage of the high thermal conductivity of graphene nanomaterials to develo
210  interplay of the absorption, electrical and thermal conductivity of graphene via the device geometry
211 lize the minute electronic specific heat and thermal conductivity of graphene, we develop a supercond
212                             We find that the thermal conductivity of HKUST-1 decreases by 40 - 80% de
213                                   Though the thermal conductivity of LFTFs was 15 times smaller than
214 t of the large polaron volume due to the low thermal conductivity of LHPs.
215 hus sought to investigate to what extent the thermal conductivity of local regions in a titanium Ti-6
216 he flammability and enhance the strength and thermal conductivity of material composites.
217                  The ability to engineer the thermal conductivity of materials allows us to control t
218 obtain excellent agreement with experimental thermal conductivity of nanocrystalline Si [Wang et al.
219                          The increase in the thermal conductivity of nanoMIL-101(Cr) MOHCs due to GO
220 transport, we broadly categorize the work on thermal conductivity of NWs into five different effects:
221                            Thanks to the low thermal conductivity of nylon and its anisotropic therma
222 rmoelectric performance by utilizing the low thermal conductivity of organic materials and the high S
223                                   Due to low thermal conductivity of rock, the heat generated at the
224 an important benchmark for understanding the thermal conductivity of single- and few-layer TMDs.
225                                    Here, the thermal conductivity of single-crystalline ReS2 in a dis
226               Here, we numerically study the thermal conductivity of single-stranded carbon-chain pol
227  been invoked to explain the low-temperature thermal conductivity of solids for decades, our study es
228      We report on the synthesis and enhanced thermal conductivity of stable Ag-decorated 2-D graphene
229                                 The measured thermal conductivity of the amorphous silicon nanowire a
230                             The out-of-plane thermal conductivity of the chemically ordered L10 phase
231 reatment shows an improvement in directional thermal conductivity of the composite of up to 400% incr
232                                      The low-thermal conductivity of the CuI films is attributed to a
233 ng Fe and Pt layers is ~23% greater than the thermal conductivity of the disordered A1 phase at room
234 act of various interatomic potentials on the thermal conductivity of the heterobilayer.
235 ow ~350 nm is more favorable to decrease the thermal conductivity of the HSMs because of the possible
236 n scattering and consequently decreasing the thermal conductivity of the lattice through the design o
237 nsport within the cavity and accordingly the thermal conductivity of the LFTFs.
238 resence of bacteria in a liquid enhances the thermal conductivity of the liquid itself.
239 aqueous phase reversibly decreases the axial thermal conductivity of the nanotube by as much as 500%,
240 he finding sheds new light on enhancement of thermal conductivity of the polymeric composites which c
241                     This is due to the lower thermal conductivity of the powder relative to solid mat
242                                 The measured thermal conductivity of the samples decreases monotonica
243  the SN2 chamber was observed due to the low thermal conductivity of the stainless steel components.
244 d on the experimental data suggests that the thermal conductivity of the surface structures ultimatel
245 n, the technique reveals local variations in thermal conductivity of this elegant natural material.
246 ence, reducing the EES; the total calculated thermal conductivity of this phase is 220 Wm(-1) K(-1) w
247 sfer point of view, it was observed that the thermal conductivity of this stable Ag-graphene/EG is si
248                                              Thermal conductivity of two-dimensional (2D) materials i
249 d corrected energy functional on the lattice thermal conductivity of wurtzite ZnO calculated using de
250  room temperature, we determined an in-plane thermal conductivity of ~ 1452 W/m-K for an infinite len
251 gistically give rise to the ultralow lattice thermal conductivity of ~0.18 W/mK at 873 K.
252                                 A record low thermal conductivity of ~1.5 W m(-1) K(-1) near 100 K wa
253                 In addition, a high specific thermal conductivity of ~75 W m(-1) K(-1) rho(-1) of the
254 rriers results in a substantial reduction in thermal conductivity on a nanosecond timescale.
255 Here, an anomalous dependence of the lattice thermal conductivity on point defects is demonstrated in
256 d the amorphous region has a remarkably high thermal conductivity, over ~16 Wm(-1) K(-1).
257                                This very low thermal conductivity primarily results from the weak van
258 hotovoltaic materials, but, despite ultralow thermal conductivity, progress on developing them for th
259                               Mechanical and thermal conductivity properties were determined and appl
260 as confirmed by the highest elastic constant/thermal conductivity ratio, as well as the diffused wave
261 lassical size effect, is responsible for the thermal conductivity reduction.
262 ring, the dominant mechanism responsible for thermal conductivity reductions below classical predicti
263 namics leading to superionicity and ultralow thermal conductivity remain poorly understood.
264                   The extraction of the true thermal conductivity requires removing the contributions
265 hich dictate thermoelectric power factor and thermal conductivity, respectively.
266 es: the stiffer the hydrogel, the higher the thermal conductivity resulting in lower photothermal hea
267 e matrix work together to reduce the lattice thermal conductivity, resulting a record high average ZT
268 at the assessment of the average single cell thermal conductivity, sample concentration, and informat
269  than previously assumed, while the inferred thermal conductivity should provide a crucial experiment
270 ls that can be switched between low and high thermal conductivity states would advance the control an
271                              The anisotropic thermal-conductivity tensor of bulk black phosphorus (BP
272 medium approximation is proposed to estimate thermal conductivity that compare favourably to measured
273 mental and practical interest for their high thermal conductivity that exceeds that of many metals.
274   In the normal state we observe a diffusive thermal conductivity that is approximately temperature i
275  a band gap of ~0.25 eV and ultralow lattice thermal conductivity that ranges between 0.3 and 0.6 W/m
276 ith the high electrical conductivity and low thermal conductivity, the screen-printed TE layers showe
277 eneral design paradigm for reducing material thermal conductivities, there exists no analogous strate
278 standing is that structural defects decrease thermal conductivity through phonon scattering where the
279 xcitations and strongly suppress the lattice thermal conductivity to an ultralow value (0.46-0.31 W m
280 surface carbonized open wood channels, a low thermal conductivity to avoid thermal loss, and cost eff
281  law requires the electronic contribution to thermal conductivity to be proportional to electrical co
282                   We attribute this ultralow thermal conductivity to the cluster rattling mechanism,
283 ar thermal components of absorption, such as thermal conductivity, to overcome the lack of experiment
284  multiscale microstructures, and low lattice thermal conductivity toward higher-performance TE materi
285 oelectric materials require ultralow lattice thermal conductivity typically through either shortening
286 ials have been deployed to realize effective thermal conductivities unattainable in natural materials
287  suppressed sound velocities and low lattice thermal conductivity, underscoring the need to understan
288 reases to the crystal growth and explain the thermal conductivity variations with the degree of cryst
289 the base fluid, a significant enhancement in thermal conductivity was observed.
290                                          The thermal conductivities were in the range of 0.2-0.5 W m(
291 envisage and develop materials with ultralow thermal conductivity, which are essential for efficient
292     Lattice defects typically reduce lattice thermal conductivity, which has been widely exploited in
293  by Sb(2) Te(3) significantly suppresses the thermal conductivity while retaining eligible carrier co
294 discontinuity of the dc conductivity and the thermal conductivity, while both the reflectivity and ab
295 rystals that exhibit the glassy trend of low thermal conductivity with a monotonic increase with temp
296 tering rate analysis, where the behaviour of thermal conductivity with dose is attributed to the accu
297 expected to produce a linear increase of the thermal conductivity with temperature that should manife
298 erfections leads to a non-monotonic trend of thermal conductivity with temperature.
299  impedance changes and evidence of increased thermal conductivity within the tissue.
300 letely accounts for the reduction in lattice thermal conductivity, without the introduction of additi

 
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