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Ultrahigh thermal isolation across heterogeneously layered two-dimensional materials
Author(s) -
Sam Vaziri,
Eilam Yalon,
Miguel Muñoz Rojo,
Saurabh V. Suryavanshi,
H. R. Zhang,
Connor J. McClellan,
Connor S. Bailey,
Kirby K. H. Smithe,
Alexander J. Gabourie,
Victoria Chen,
Sanchit Deshmukh,
Leonid A. Bendersky,
Albert V. Davydov,
Eric Pop
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aax1325
Subject(s) - materials science , thermal conductivity , phonon , optoelectronics , photonics , thermal resistance , thermal , nanomaterials , monolayer , heterojunction , interfacial thermal resistance , metamaterial , graphene , stack (abstract data type) , raman spectroscopy , thermal insulation , photon , nanotechnology , composite material , optics , condensed matter physics , layer (electronics) , physics , meteorology , computer science , programming language
Heterogeneous integration of nanomaterials has enabled advanced electronics and photonics applications. However, similar progress has been challenging for thermal applications, in part due to shorter wavelengths of heat carriers (phonons) compared to electrons and photons. Here, we demonstrate unusually high thermal isolation across ultrathin heterostructures, achieved by layering atomically thin two-dimensional (2D) materials. We realize artificial stacks of monolayer graphene, MoS, and WSe with thermal resistance greater than 100 times thicker SiO and effective thermal conductivity lower than air at room temperature. Using Raman thermometry, we simultaneously identify the thermal resistance between any 2D monolayers in the stack. Ultrahigh thermal isolation is achieved through the mismatch in mass density and phonon density of states between the 2D layers. These thermal metamaterials are an example in the emerging field of phononics and could find applications where ultrathin thermal insulation is desired, in thermal energy harvesting, or for routing heat in ultracompact geometries.

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