Unified Statistical Theory of Heat Conduction in Nonuniform Media

Abstract

Using the Zwanzig projection-operator formalism, we derive a causal two-point spatiotemporal kernel for heat conduction, defined microscopically as a space-resolved equilibrium heat-flux time-correlation function, that encodes temporal memory, spatial nonlocality, and material heterogeneity on equal footing. Classical diffusion, nonlocal transport, and hydrodynamic models emerge as controlled asymptotic limits of this kernel, providing a unified constitutive description across diffusive, quasi-ballistic, and hydrodynamic regimes. Interfacial heat transfer is incorporated through a spatially resolved kernel formulation, in which the conventional Kapitza resistance arises as a coarse-grained limit. The kernel admits a spatiotemporal Green--Kubo representation and can, in principle, be evaluated from atomistic simulations for bulk media, providing a direct connection between microscopic dynamics and continuum transport without empirical closure. For crystalline solids, we derive explicit kernel forms in the hydrodynamic and attenuated-streaming limits and introduce a hybrid reduction that captures the coexistence of collective and quasi-ballistic transport. For disordered harmonic solids, the framework recovers a spatial diffusion kernel consistent with the Allen--Feldman limit. To illustrate the theory, we construct the kernel for silicon at room temperature within the relaxation-time approximation and apply it to transient thermal grating configurations. Spatial nonlocality associated with the phonon mean-free-path distribution is the primary source of deviation from Fourier transport under these conditions, while temporal memory mainly influences short-time dynamics. These findings identify the spatiotemporal kernel as a unifying constitutive descriptor whose coarse-grained limits recover conventional transport coefficients.

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