4.8 Article

Nonequilibrium Phonon Thermal Resistance at MoS2/Oxide and Graphene/Oxide Interfaces

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages 22372-22380

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c02062

Keywords

thermal boundary resistance; interfaces of 2D materials; internal thermal resistance; nonequilibrium phonons; thermal management; 2D material devices

Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 2 [MOE2019-T2-2-135]
  2. Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 1 FRC Project [FY2016]
  3. ASCENT, one of six centers in JUMP, a Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) program - DARPA
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

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In this study, accurate measurements of thermal boundary resistance (R) of 2D material interfaces were conducted. It was found that, in addition to phonon transport, thermal resistance between nonequilibrium phonons in the 2D materials could also play a critical role. These findings provide important insights into heat dissipation in 2D material devices and highlight the significance of considering the influence of nonequilibrium phonons in device design.
Accurate measurements and physical understanding of thermal boundary resistance (R) of two-dimensional (2D) materials are imperative for effective thermal management of 2D electronics and photonics. In previous studies, heat dissipation from 2D material devices was presumed to be dominated by phonon transport across the interfaces. In this study, we find that, in addition to phonon transport, thermal resistance between nonequilibrium phonons in the 2D materials could play a critical role too when the 2D material devices are internally self-heated, either optically or electrically. We accurately measure the R of oxide/MoS2/oxide and oxide/graphene/oxide interfaces for three oxides (SiO2, HfO2, and Al2O3) by differential time-domain thermoreflectance (TDTR). Our measurements of R across these interfaces with external heating are 2-4 times lower than the previously reported R of the similar interfaces measured by Raman thermometry with internal self-heating. Using a simple model, we show that the observed discrepancy can be explained by an additional internal thermal resistance (Rint) between nonequilibrium phonons present during Raman measurements. We subsequently estimate that, for MoS2 and graphene, Rint approximate to 31 and 22 m2 K GW-1, respectively. The values are comparable to the thermal resistance due to finite phonon transmission across interfaces of 2D materials and thus cannot be ignored in the design of 2D material devices. Moreover, the nonequilibrium phonons also lead to a different temperature dependence than that by phonon transport. As such, our work provides important insights into physical understanding of heat dissipation in 2D material devices.

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