Temperature dependence of electrical and thermal conduction in single silver nanowire

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Abstract

In this work, the thermal and electrical transport in an individual silver nanowire is characterized down to 35 K for in-depth understanding of the strong structural defect induced electron scattering. The results indicate that, at room temperature, the electrical resistivity increases by around 4 folds from that of bulk silver. The Debye temperature (151 K) of the silver nanowire is found 36% lower than that (235 K) of bulk silver, confirming strong phonon softening. At room temperature, the thermal conductivity is reduced by 55% from that of bulk silver. This reduction becomes larger as the temperature goes down. To explain the opposite trends of thermal conductivity (κ) ∼ temperature (T) of silver nanowire and bulk silver, a unified thermal resistivity (Θ = T/κ) is used to elucidate the electron scattering mechanism. A large residual Θ is observed for silver nanowire while that of the bulk silver is almost zero. The same Θ∼T trend proposes that the silver nanowire and bulk silver share the similar phonon-electron scattering mechanism for thermal transport. Due to phonon-assisted electron energy transfer across grain boundaries, the Lorenz number of the silver nanowire is found much larger than that of bulk silver and decreases with decreasing temperature.

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Cheng, Z., Liu, L., Xu, S., Lu, M., & Wang, X. (2015). Temperature dependence of electrical and thermal conduction in single silver nanowire. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep10718

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