Heat conduction characteristics of vertically aligned single-walled carbon nanotubes measured by raman spectroscopy

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Abstract

In this work, the film thermal conductivity and the film-substrate interfacial thermal contact resistance of vertically-aligned single-walled carbon nanotube (VA-SWNT) films were measured with a proposed method utilizing temperature dependence of Raman spectrum. The proposed method harnesses the excitation laser power of the Raman spectroscopy to heat the VA-SWNT films synthesized on a silicon substrate by alcohol catalytic chemical vapor decomposition (ACCVD) method, and measures film temperature from the Raman spectrum. A relationship between the input laser heat and the measured temperature is modeled with a detailed heat conduction equation, and its numerical solutions were compared with the experimentally measured results to extract the film thermal conductivity and the film-substrate interfacial thermal contact resistance. The method found the thermal conductivity of the VA-SWNT film to be around 2 Wm-1K-1 and the film-substrate interfacial thermal contact resistance to be around 2×10-6 m2KW-1. The obtained film thermal conductivity corresponds to the thermal conductivity equivalent of an individual SWNT of several tens of Wm-1K-1. This value was more than an order of magnitude smaller than the values reported on individual SWNTs. ©2013 The Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers.

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APA

Ishikawa, K., Chiashi, S., Badar, S., Thurakitseree, T., Hori, T., Xiang, R., … Maruyama, S. (2013). Heat conduction characteristics of vertically aligned single-walled carbon nanotubes measured by raman spectroscopy. Nihon Kikai Gakkai Ronbunshu, B Hen/Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers, Part B, 79(798), 185–198. https://doi.org/10.1299/kikaib.79.185

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