Heat transport through propagon-phonon interaction in epitaxial amorphous-crystalline multilayers

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Abstract

Managing heat dissipation is a necessity for nanoscale electronic devices with high-density interfaces, but despite considerable effort, it has been difficult to establish the phonon transport physics at the interface due to a “complex” interface layer. In contrast, the amorphous/epitaxial interface is expected to have almost no “complex” interface layer due to the lack of lattice mismatch strain and less associated defects. Here, we experimentally observe the extremely-small interface thermal resistance per unit area at the interface of the amorphous-germanium sulfide/epitaxial-lead telluride superlattice (~0.8 ± 4.0 × 10‒9 m2KW−1). Ab initio lattice dynamics calculations demonstrate that high phonon transmission through this interface can be predicted, like electron transport physics, from large vibron-phonon density-of-states overlapping and phonon group velocity similarity between propagon in amorphous layer and “conventional” phonon in crystal. This indicates that controlling phonon (or vibron) density-of-states and phonon group velocity similarity can be a comprehensive guideline to manage heat conduction in nanoscale systems.

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Ishibe, T., Okuhata, R., Kaneko, T., Yoshiya, M., Nakashima, S., Ishida, A., & Nakamura, Y. (2021). Heat transport through propagon-phonon interaction in epitaxial amorphous-crystalline multilayers. Communications Physics, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-021-00653-w

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