Length-dependent thermal conductivity in suspended single-layer graphene.

Nat Commun

1] Department of Physics, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117542, Singapore [2] Graphene Research Center, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117542, Singapore [3] NanoCore, 4 Engineering Drive 3, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117576, Singapore [4] NUS Graduate School for Integrative Science and Engineering, Singapore 117456, Singapore.

Published: April 2014

Graphene exhibits extraordinary electronic and mechanical properties, and extremely high thermal conductivity. Being a very stable atomically thick membrane that can be suspended between two leads, graphene provides a perfect test platform for studying thermal conductivity in two-dimensional systems, which is of primary importance for phonon transport in low-dimensional materials. Here we report experimental measurements and non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations of thermal conduction in suspended single-layer graphene as a function of both temperature and sample length. Interestingly and in contrast to bulk materials, at 300 K, thermal conductivity keeps increasing and remains logarithmically divergent with sample length even for sample lengths much larger than the average phonon mean free path. This result is a consequence of the two-dimensional nature of phonons in graphene, and provides fundamental understanding of thermal transport in two-dimensional materials.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4689DOI Listing

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