Synopsis

How Defects Keep Graphene Cool

Physics 11, s70
Defects in graphene lead to a localized cooling effect that could be used to control heat dissipation in nanodevices.
J. F. Kong/MIT

Material imperfections, such as an atom out of place or a boundary between crystallites, usually reduce a material’s ability to dissipate heat. Now Jian Feng Kong at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, and colleagues predict a mechanism via which impurity defects—foreign atoms—in graphene can instead increase heat dissipation. Analyzing the impact of such defects on the local emission of phonons by the electrons, the team found that the defects can act like a resonant cavity for phonons, amplifying phonon emission up to tenfold. This cooling mechanism could be turned on and off by an applied voltage, enabling controllable cooling in graphene-based nanodevices.

The heat dissipation mechanism discovered by Kong and colleagues takes advantage of a process analogous to the so-called Purcell effect—the enhanced emission of photons by an atom trapped in a resonant optical cavity. Here, instead of an atom in a cavity, an electron is trapped by a defect. When an electronic transition of the defect is resonant with the energy of the trapped electron, the electron emits phonons more efficiently. This enhanced emission facilitates heat dissipation in the region around the defect.

The team predicts that this cooling mechanism could be tuned by changing the graphene sheet’s Fermi energy, which determines the energy of the electrons that interact with the defect. This tuning could be achieved experimentally by applying a voltage to the material. The researchers say that this Purcell-like mechanism could explain recently measured heat-dissipation maps of graphene that indicate that electrons lose most of their energy around defects.

This research is published in Physical Review B.

–Katherine Wright

Katherine Wright is a Contributing Editor for Physics.


Subject Areas

GrapheneCondensed Matter PhysicsMaterials Science

Related Articles

Witnessing the Birth of Skyrmions
Condensed Matter Physics

Witnessing the Birth of Skyrmions

Using thin layers of chiral nematic liquid crystals, researchers have observed the formation dynamics of skyrmions. Read More »

Viewing a Quantum Spin Liquid through QED
Condensed Matter Physics

Viewing a Quantum Spin Liquid through QED

A numerical investigation has revealed a surprising correspondence between a lattice spin model and a quantum field theory. Read More »

Thermal Conductivity Not Too Hot to Handle
Materials Science

Thermal Conductivity Not Too Hot to Handle

A radiometry technique directly measures thermal conductivity in molten metals and confirms the relationship with electrical resistivity. Read More »

More Articles