Heat dissipation in atomic-scale junctions.

Nature

Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.

Published: June 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Atomic and single-molecule junctions are key for miniaturizing electrical circuits and testing quantum transport theories for energy transfer in nanoscale devices.
  • Recent experiments reveal that heat dissipation in these junctions varies depending on their transmission characteristics, resulting in asymmetric heat transfer between electrodes for certain molecular junctions.
  • The study establishes a link between electronic transmission and heat dissipation, paving the way for future research on Peltier effects and heat transport in atomic and molecular junctions, which are critical yet underexplored areas in science and technology.

Article Abstract

Atomic and single-molecule junctions represent the ultimate limit to the miniaturization of electrical circuits. They are also ideal platforms for testing quantum transport theories that are required to describe charge and energy transfer in novel functional nanometre-scale devices. Recent work has successfully probed electric and thermoelectric phenomena in atomic-scale junctions. However, heat dissipation and transport in atomic-scale devices remain poorly characterized owing to experimental challenges. Here we use custom-fabricated scanning probes with integrated nanoscale thermocouples to investigate heat dissipation in the electrodes of single-molecule ('molecular') junctions. We find that if the junctions have transmission characteristics that are strongly energy dependent, this heat dissipation is asymmetric--that is, unequal between the electrodes--and also dependent on both the bias polarity and the identity of the majority charge carriers (electrons versus holes). In contrast, junctions consisting of only a few gold atoms ('atomic junctions') whose transmission characteristics show weak energy dependence do not exhibit appreciable asymmetry. Our results unambiguously relate the electronic transmission characteristics of atomic-scale junctions to their heat dissipation properties, establishing a framework for understanding heat dissipation in a range of mesoscopic systems where transport is elastic--that is, without exchange of energy in the contact region. We anticipate that the techniques established here will enable the study of Peltier effects at the atomic scale, a field that has been barely explored experimentally despite interesting theoretical predictions. Furthermore, the experimental advances described here are also expected to enable the study of heat transport in atomic and molecular junctions--an important and challenging scientific and technological goal that has remained elusive.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature12183DOI Listing

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