Accurate measurement of in-plane thermal conductivity of layered materials without metal film transducer using frequency domain thermoreflectance

Abstract

Measuring anisotropic thermal conductivity has always been a challenging task in thermal metrology. Although recent developments of pump–probe thermoreflectance techniques such as variable spot sizes, offset pump–probe beams, and elliptical beams have enabled the measurement of anisotropic thermal conductivity, a metal film transducer enabled for the absorption of the modulated pump laser beam and the detection of the thermoreflectance signal. However, the existence of the transducer would cause in-plane heat spreading, suppressing the measurement sensitivity to the in-plane thermal conductivity. In addition, the transducer film also adds complexity to data processing, since it requires careful calibration or fitting to determine extra parameters such as the film thickness and conductivity, and interface conductance between the transducer and the sample. In this work, we discussed the methodology for measuring in-plane thermal conductivity of layered semiconductors and semimetals without any transducer layer. We show that the removal of transducer results in the dominantly large sensitivity to in-plane thermal conductivity compared with other parameters, such as cross-plane thermal conductivity and the absorption depth of the laser beams. Transducerless frequency-domain thermoreflectance (FDTR) measurements are performed on three reference layered-materials, highly ordered pyrolytic graphite, molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), and bismuth selenide (Bi2Se3) and demonstrated using the analytical thermal model that the measured in-plane thermal conductivity showed much-improved accuracy compared with conventional FDTR measurement with a transducer.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jun 01, 2020
Source ID
10.1063/5.0003770

Entities

People

  • Aaron J Schmidt
  • Gang Chen
  • Jungwoo Shin
  • Xin Qian
  • Zhiwei Ding

Organizations

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • National Science Foundation

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Materials Science and Engineering.
  • Optical Physics and Photonics.
  • Solar Photovoltaics and Thermoelectric Devices.

Technology Areas

  • Directed Energy
  • Directed Energy - Pulsed-Laser Deposition
  • Microelectronics
  • Microelectronics - Graphene