MRS Meetings and Events

 

EN07.05.12 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Effect of Fluorination on The Thermal Conductivity of Graphite Fluoride (CF)

When and Where

Apr 23, 2024
5:00pm - 7:00pm

Flex Hall C, Level 2, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Wonsik Lee1,Seungbin Han1,Hyejin Jang1

Seoul National University1

Abstract

Wonsik Lee1,Seungbin Han1,Hyejin Jang1

Seoul National University1
For thermal management applications, there are surging demands for materials with high thermal conductivity and electrically insulating properties. Graphite fluoride (CF), one of the novel graphene-based layered materials, has emerged as a promising thermal management material owing to its similar crystal structure to that of graphite yet electrically insulating properties, i.e., electronic band gap of over 3 eV. CF is expected to show high thermal conductivity due to its structural similarity to graphite. However, the degree of which fluorination alters the thermal conductivity is largely unexplored, and even the thermal conductivity is not experimentally established. Here, we report the through- and in-plane thermal conductivity of mechanically exfoliated CF flakes for the first time by using time-domain thermoreflectance (TDTR). At room temperature, a 70-nm-thick CF flake shows (1700±300) W m<sup>-1</sup> K<sup>-1</sup> for in-plane direction, which is about 90 % of that of graphite, and (4.0±0.8) W m<sup>-1</sup> K<sup>-1</sup> for through-plane direction. The through-plane thermal conductivity of CF flakes shows quasi-ballistic behavior for thicknesses &lt; 200 nm, which is similarly observed in graphite but shows two times higher through-plane thermal conductivity than that of graphite. We calculate the phonon properties of monolayer graphene and graphene fluoride to reveal the intrinsic phonon transport mechanisms by solving the phonon Boltzmann transport equation (BTE). BTE estimates the thermal conductivity of graphene and graphene fluoride as 3000 W m<sup>-1</sup> K<sup>-1</sup> and 270 W m<sup>-1</sup> K<sup>-1</sup>, respectively. Phonon mode thermal conductivity indicates that the fluorination opens an out-of-plane acoustic (ZA) phonon scattering channel and the ZA phonon contribution to the thermal conductivity of CF is greatly suppressed, compared to the case of graphene. To understand the discrepancy in thermal conductivity between the experimental and theoretical results, we characterize the chemical and optical properties of exfoliated CF flakes to correlate those properties with thermal conductivity results. We believe this work reveals the role of functional groups on thermal conductivity in graphene/graphite-derivative materials.

Keywords

2D materials | metrology | 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

Woochul Kim
Sunmi Shin

In this Session

EN07.05.01
Thermal Conductance of Buried AlN Interfaces Measured by Dual-Frequency Time-Domain Thermoreflectance

EN07.05.03
Decoupling Electronic and Thermal Transport in Spinel Oxide

EN07.05.04
Temperature Dependent Electron Emission in Focused Ion Beam Microscopes

EN07.05.06
Precision Microengineering of Curved Metallic Heat Transfer Surfaces for Fouling Inhibition

EN07.05.07
Understanding Phonon Mediated Lattice Thermal Conductivity in Magnetic Trihalides

EN07.05.08
Synergetic Effect of Radiative Cooling and Thermal Energy Storage for Advanced Thermal Management

EN07.05.09
Temperature-Dependent Optical Properties of Monocrystalline CaF2, BaF2, and MgF2

EN07.05.10
Transient Active Cooling of Microscale Hot Spots Using Thermoelectric Devices

EN07.05.11
Improved Durability Nanotextured Aluminum Surfaces for Jumping Droplet Thermal Rectification

EN07.05.12
Effect of Fluorination on The Thermal Conductivity of Graphite Fluoride (CF)

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