April 22 - 26, 2024
Seattle, Washington
May 7 - 9, 2024 (Virtual)
Symposium Supporters
2024 MRS Spring Meeting
EN07.09.01

Engineering and Probing Phonons and Thermal Transport

When and Where

Apr 24, 2024
3:30pm - 4:00pm
Room 327, Level 3, Summit

Presenter(s)

Co-Author(s)

Ilaria Zardo1,Begoña Abad Mayor1,Chaitanya Arya1,Giulio de Vito1,Yashpreet Kaur1,Grazia Raciti1,Aswathi K. Sivan1,Jose Manuel Sojo Gordillo1,Saeko Tachikawa1,Johannes Trautvetter1

University of Basel1

Abstract

Ilaria Zardo1,Begoña Abad Mayor1,Chaitanya Arya1,Giulio de Vito1,Yashpreet Kaur1,Grazia Raciti1,Aswathi K. Sivan1,Jose Manuel Sojo Gordillo1,Saeko Tachikawa1,Johannes Trautvetter1

University of Basel1
The recently growing research field called “Nanophononics” deals with the investigation and control of vibrations in solids at the nanoscale. Phonon engineering leads to a controlled modification of phonon dispersion, phonon interactions, and transport [1, 2]. However, engineering and probing phonons and phonon transport at the nanoscale is a non-trivial problem.<br/>In this talk, we discuss how phononic properties and thermal transport can be engineered and measured in nanowires and the challenges and progresses in the measurement of the thermal conductivity of nanostructures and low dimensional systems. The concept of phonon engineering in nanowires is exploited in GaAs/GaP superlattice nanowires [3]. We experimentally show that a controlled design of the nanowires’ phononic properties can be decided à la carte by tuning the superlattice period [4]. <br/>We also investigated thermal rectification in semiconducting gallium arsenide nanowires with an abrupt change in diameter [5], also called telescopic nanowires. We measured rectification values ranging from 2 to 7% at a range of ambient temperatures, with rectification values increasing for larger temperature gradients. The direction of rectification and its dependence on temperature gradient is con-firmed by ab-initio calculations using the acoustic mismatch model, taking into account the contribution from interfacial thermal resistance.<br/>Finally, Raman thermometry is used to probe the temperature profile in nanostructures upon application of a thermal gradient, enabling the differentiation between different thermal transport regimes.<br/> <br/><b>References</b><br/>[1] M. Maldovan, Nature <b>503</b>, 209 (2013). <br/>[2] S. Voltz, et al., Eur. Phys. J. B <b>89</b>, 15 (2016).<br/>[3] O. Arif et al., Nanoscale <b>15</b>(3), 1145-1153 (2023).<br/>[4] A. K. Sivan, et al., ACS Applied Nano Materials <b>Article ASAP, </b>DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.3c04245<br/>[5] W. Kim, A. Fontacuberta i Morral, Nano Lett. <b>18</b>, 49-57 (2018).

Keywords

nanoscale | thermal conductivity

Symposium Organizers

Woochul Kim, Yonsei University
Sheng Shen, Carnegie Mellon University
Sunmi Shin, National University of Singapore
Sebastian Volz, The University of Tokyo

Session Chairs

Deyu Li
Sunmi Shin

In this Session