Influence of Highly Non-Equilibrium Electron-Phonon Transport on Heat Conduction across Metal-Insulator Superlattice
ORAL
Abstract
Nanostructuring is often utilized to improve figure-of-merit of thermoelectric materials by reducing thermal conductivity (TC). There, thermal boundary conductance at nanostructure interfaces is important, and population of heat carriers can be highly non-equilibrium. One strategy to further reduce TC is to utilize metal–semiconductor interfaces, such as in metal-semiconductor superlattice with the electron-phonon scattering mean free path being comparable or longer than the nanostructure length-scale. There, the nonequilibrium interfacial regions are expected to make phonons the dominant heat carrier even in the metal part, which should contribute to the reduction of TC. In this study, we take metal-insulator(MgO) superlattice as a model case and measure the TC by the time-domain thermoreflectance method. We prepare two kinds of samples with different metal layers (AuSi or Ta) with relative difference in the electron-phonon coupling strength. As a result, for both kinds of samples, TC of superlattice was reduced as the unit-layer of the superlattice was made thinner. While the reduction of TC is expected due to the increase in the number of interfaces, the different trends of reduction between AuSi and Ta samples suggest roles of non-equilibrium phonon-electron transport.
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Presenters
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KYOUNGJUNG KIM
Mechanical Engineering, Univ of Tokyo
Authors
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KYOUNGJUNG KIM
Mechanical Engineering, Univ of Tokyo
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Yosuke Kurosaki
Research & Development Group, Hitachi Ltd.
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Naoto Fukatani
Research & Development Group, Hitachi Ltd.
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Shin Yabuuchi
Research & Development Group, Hitachi Ltd.
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Yusuke Ira
Mechanical Engineering, Univ of Tokyo
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Cheng Shao
Mechanical Engineering, Univ of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo
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Jun Hayakawa
Research & Development Group, Hitachi Ltd.
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Junichiro Shiomi
Mechanical Engineering, Univ of Tokyo, Univ of Tokyo