4.7 Article

Effects of mass and interaction mismatches on in-plane and cross-plane thermal transport of Si-doped graphene

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2021.120979

Keywords

Thermal transport; Graphene; Si doping; Phonon scattering; Molecular dynamics

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [CBET-1933800]
  2. National Science Foundation [ACI-1053575]

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The effects of silicon (Si) doping on the thermal transport of graphene were investigated, showing that Si doping suppresses in-plane transport but enhances cross-plane transport due to multiple factors such as phonon scattering and interfacial interactions. This enhanced understanding of doping effects provides insights for effective thermal transport control in various graphene structures.
The effects of silicon (Si) doping on the in-plane and cross-plane thermal transport of suspended and silicon dioxide (SiO2) supported graphene were investigated via molecular dynamics simulations. Due to the large mismatch in atomic mass and interaction with neighboring carbon atoms, Si can act as an effective phonon scatterer, thus suppressing the thermal transport. In this study, we evaluated the contributions of mass and interaction mismatches of Si dopants to the reduction in the in-plane thermal conductivity and the cross-plane thermal resistance through systematic control of the dopant's properties. 2% Si doping reduces the in-plane transport of suspended graphene by , 94% due to the increased scattering, while the SiO2-supported graphene is less affected. The phonon scattering by Si linearly increases with the Si content, and the interaction mismatch has a greater influence on the phonon kinetics during inplane transport than the mass mismatch. In contrast, the cross-plane transport is enhanced by Si doping, decreasing the interfacial thermal resistance by similar to 30%, because of the stronger interfacial interactions by weaker in-plane bonding and the smaller atomic mass mismatch with the substrate material. The enhanced understanding of doping effects on thermal transport from this research is expected to provide insights for effective thermal transport control in various graphene structures. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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