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Enhanced Thermal Boundary Conductance in Few‐Layer Ti 3 C 2 MXene with Encapsulation
Author(s) -
Yasaei Poya,
Hemmat Zahra,
Foss Cameron J.,
Li Shixuan Justin,
Hong Liang,
Behranginia Amirhossein,
Majidi Leily,
Klie Robert F.,
Barsoum Michel W.,
Aksamija Zlatan,
SalehiKhojin Amin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.201801629
Subject(s) - materials science , interfacial thermal resistance , phonon , nanotechnology , oxide , thermal conductivity , atomic layer deposition , thermal resistance , heat transfer , thin film , composite material , condensed matter physics , physics , metallurgy , thermodynamics
Van der Waals interactions in 2D materials have enabled the realization of nanoelectronics with high‐density vertical integration. Yet, poor energy transport through such 2D–2D and 2D–3D interfaces can limit a device's performance due to overheating. One long‐standing question in the field is how different encapsulating layers (e.g., contact metals or gate oxides) contribute to the thermal transport at the interface of 2D materials with their 3D substrates. Here, a novel self‐heating/self‐sensing electrical thermometry platform is developed based on atomically thin, metallic Ti 3 C 2 MXene sheets, which enables experimental investigation of the thermal transport at a Ti 3 C 2 /SiO 2 interface, with and without an aluminum oxide (AlO x ) encapsulating layer. It is found that at room temperature, the thermal boundary conductance (TBC) increases from 10.8 to 19.5 MW m −2 K −1 upon AlO x encapsulation. Boltzmann transport modeling reveals that the TBC can be understood as a series combination of an external resistance between the MXene and the substrate, due to the coupling of low‐frequency flexural acoustic (ZA) phonons to substrate modes, and an internal resistance between ZA and in‐plane phonon modes. It is revealed that internal resistance is a bottle‐neck to heat removal and that encapsulation speeds up the heat transfer into low‐frequency ZA modes and reduces their depopulation, thus increasing the effective TBC.