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Effect of graphene-substrate conformity on the in-plane thermal conductivity of supported graphene

Cited 24 time in Web of Science Cited 25 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Hong Goo; Kihm, Kenneth D.; Lee, Woomin; Lim, Gyumin; Cheon, Sosan; Lee, Woorim; Pyun, Kyung Rok; Ko, Seung Hwan; Shin, Seungha

Issue Date
2017-12
Publisher
Pergamon Press Ltd.
Citation
Carbon, Vol.125, pp.39-48
Abstract
Measuring the thermal conductivity k(g) of supported graphene is inherently complicated due to uncertainties associated with the heat dissipation into the substrate. We innovate the use of an ultra-thin 8-nm SiO2 substrate to alleviate these uncertainties and thus improve the accuracy of optothermal Raman technique to measure k(g) of supported graphene. As a result, we present an extensive k(g) database for a wide temperature range from 325 K to 575 K. Furthermore, we have found that the thermal conductivity of supported graphene before annealing is close to that of suspended graphene at 3000 W m(-1) K-1, which is attributable to graphene "suspension" lightly on the substrate roughness, and then progressively decreases over repeated thermal annealing. We elaborate on this annealing-induced kg to occur mainly because of the thermally enhanced graphene-substrate conformity and interfacial scattering by probing the Raman spectroscopic characterization of charge carrier density in graphene and the thermal expansion mismatching strain between graphene and substrate. Repeated thermal annealing also expedites the depletion of intercalated impurities to reduce the graphene-substrate separation distance, which acts to further reduces k(g), ultimately to its lower bound under vacuum-annealing. Therefore, manipulating the thermo-mechanical affiliation can offer an alternative route to control the in-plane thermal conductivity of supported graphene. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
ISSN
0008-6223
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/206598
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2017.09.033
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  • College of Engineering
  • Department of Mechanical Engineering
Research Area Laser Assisted Patterning, Liquid Crystal Elastomer, Stretchable Electronics, 로보틱스, 스마트 제조, 열공학

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