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Anisotropic in-plane thermal conductivity of black phosphorus nanoribbons at temperatures higher than 100 K

  • Sangwook Lee
  • , Fan Yang
  • , Joonki Suh
  • , Sijie Yang
  • , Yeonbae Lee
  • , Guo Li
  • , Hwan Sung Choe
  • , Aslihan Suslu
  • , Yabin Chen
  • , Changhyun Ko
  • , Joonsuk Park
  • , Kai Liu
  • , Jingbo Li
  • , Kedar Hippalgaonkar
  • , Jeffrey J. Urban
  • , Sefaattin Tongay
  • , Junqiao Wu
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • University of California at Berkeley
  • Arizona State University
  • Stanford University
  • CAS - Institute of Semiconductors
  • Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Singapore

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

370 Scopus citations

Abstract

Black phosphorus attracts enormous attention as a promising layered material for electronic, optoelectronic and thermoelectric applications. Here we report large anisotropy in in-plane thermal conductivity of single-crystal black phosphorus nanoribbons along the zigzag and armchair lattice directions at variable temperatures. Thermal conductivity measurements were carried out under the condition of steady-state longitudinal heat flow using suspendedpad micro-devices. We discovered increasing thermal conductivity anisotropy, up to a factor of two, with temperatures above 100 K. A size effect in thermal conductivity was also observed in which thinner nanoribbons show lower thermal conductivity. Analysed with the relaxation time approximation model using phonon dispersions obtained based on density function perturbation theory, the high anisotropy is attributed mainly to direction-dependent phonon dispersion and partially to phonon-phonon scattering. Our results revealing the intrinsic, orientation-dependent thermal conductivity of black phosphorus are useful for designing devices, as well as understanding fundamental physical properties of layered materials.

Original languageEnglish
Article number8573
JournalNature Communications
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - 2015

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