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Functionalization mediates heat transport in graphene nanoflakes

Authors :
Sebastian Volz
Kimmo Sääskilahti
Michael Edwards
Yuxiang Ni
Murali Murugesan
Lilei Ye
Haoxue Han
Johan Liu
Steven Bailey
Yuriy A. Kosevich
Colin J. Lambert
Yong Zhang
Yifeng Fu
Shiyun Xiong
Majid Kabiri Samani
Zainelabideen Y. Mijbil
Hatef Sadeghi
Nan Wang
Laboratoire d'Énergétique Moléculaire et Macroscopique, Combustion (EM2C)
Université Paris Saclay (COmUE)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-CentraleSupélec
University of Shanghai [Shanghai]
Chalmers University of Technology [Göteborg]
Minnesota State University [Mankato]
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system
Lancaster University
Green University of Al Qasim
Partenaires INRAE
Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
Aalto University
SHT Smart High Tech
N. N. Semenov Institute of Chemical Physics
Russian Academy of Sciences [Moscow] (RAS)
Université Paris-Saclay
Chalmers University of Technology
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Al-Qasim Green University
Department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering
SHT Smart High Tech AB
RAS - N.N. Semenov Institute of Chemical Physics
Aalto-yliopisto
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2016), Nature Communications (2041-1723) vol.7(2016), Nature Communications, Nature Publishing Group, 2016, ⟨10.1038/ncomms11281⟩
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2016.

Abstract

The high thermal conductivity of graphene and few-layer graphene undergoes severe degradations through contact with the substrate. Here we show experimentally that the thermal management of a micro heater is substantially improved by introducing alternative heat-escaping channels into a graphene-based film bonded to functionalized graphene oxide through amino-silane molecules. Using a resistance temperature probe for in situ monitoring we demonstrate that the hotspot temperature was lowered by ∼28 °C for a chip operating at 1,300 W cm−2. Thermal resistance probed by pulsed photothermal reflectance measurements demonstrated an improved thermal coupling due to functionalization on the graphene–graphene oxide interface. Three functionalization molecules manifest distinct interfacial thermal transport behaviour, corroborating our atomistic calculations in unveiling the role of molecular chain length and functional groups. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that the functionalization constrains the cross-plane phonon scattering, which in turn enhances in-plane heat conduction of the bonded graphene film by recovering the long flexural phonon lifetime.<br />The high thermal conductivity of graphene is considerably reduced when the two-dimensional material is in contact with a substrate. Here, the authors show that thermal management of a micro heater is improved using graphene-based films covalently bonded by amino-silane molecules to graphene oxide.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9838b0401b512d9b03893bea49157b35