Abstract
The ability to precisely control the thermal conductivity (κ) of a material is fundamental in the development of on-chip heat management or energy conversion applications. Nanostructuring permits a marked reduction of κ of single-crystalline materials, as recently demonstrated for silicon nanowires. However, silicon-based nanostructured materials with extremely low κ are not limited to nanowires. By engineering a set of individual phonon-scattering nanodot barriers we have accurately tailored the thermal conductivity of a single-crystalline SiGe material in spatially defined regions as short as ∼15 nm. Single-barrier thermal resistances between 2 and 4×10−9 m2 K W−1 were attained, resulting in a room-temperature κ down to about 0.9 W m−1 K−1, in multilayered structures with as little as five barriers. Such low thermal conductivity is compatible with a totally diffuse mismatch model for the barriers, and it is well below the amorphous limit. The results are in agreement with atomistic Green’s function simulations.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the EU (Nano-thermoelectrics, IRG 39302), ANR (Thermaescape, ANR-06-NANO-054-01, Accatone), (EThNA, ANR-06-NANO-020), (OCTE, ANR-06-BLAN-129), the Conseil Régional d’Aquitaine (projet Photon et Phonons, 2007), the DFG (SPP1386, RA 1634/5-1), the European Regional Development Fund (n. 4212/09-13) and the State of Saxony. We acknowledge A. Hiess, Ch. Mickel, G. Scheider, T. Dienel, C. C. Bof Bufon, S. Harazim, D. Grimm, S. Baunack and B. Eichler for experimental assistance, B. Rellinghaus for access to the Tecnai T20 TEM and A. Rotondi (Univ. Pavia) for insightful discussions on error propagation in the 3ω method measurements.
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G.P. and J.M.R. carried out the HPTR measurements and analysis; M.S., U.D. and O.G.S. were responsible for the sample growth; G.S. and M.P. metallized the samples for HPTR. F.P. and M.S. carried out AFM measurements; F.P., P.C. and A.R. carried out the 3ω measurements and analysis, on a set-up realized by A.J.; P.C., F.P., J.S. and I.M. processed and characterized the samples for 3ω measurements; C.D. carried out the TEM measurements; I.S. carried out the Green’s function calculation. I.S., S.W. and N.M. developed the theory. A.R., S.D. and N.M. coordinated the work and wrote the paper.
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Pernot, G., Stoffel, M., Savic, I. et al. Precise control of thermal conductivity at the nanoscale through individual phonon-scattering barriers. Nature Mater 9, 491–495 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat2752
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat2752