Universal Behavior of Highly Confined Heat Flow in Semiconductor Nanosystems: From Nanomeshes to Metalattices

Brendan McBennett, Albert Beardo, Emma E. Nelson, Begoña Abad, Travis D. Frazer, Amitava Adak, Yuka Esashi, Baowen Li, Henry C. Kapteyn, Margaret M. Murnane, Joshua L. Knobloch

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Abstract

Nanostructuring on length scales corresponding to phonon mean free paths provides control over heat flow in semiconductors and makes it possible to engineer their thermal properties. However, the influence of boundaries limits the validity of bulk models, while first-principles calculations are too computationally expensive to model real devices. Here we use extreme ultraviolet beams to study phonon transport dynamics in a 3D nanostructured silicon metalattice with deep nanoscale feature size and observe dramatically reduced thermal conductivity relative to bulk. To explain this behavior, we develop a predictive theory wherein thermal conduction separates into a geometric permeability component and an intrinsic viscous contribution, arising from a new and universal effect of nanoscale confinement on phonon flow. Using experiments and atomistic simulations, we show that our theory applies to a general set of highly confined silicon nanosystems, from metalattices, nanomeshes, porous nanowires, to nanowire networks, of great interest for next-generation energy-efficient devices.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2129-2136
Number of pages15
JournalNano Letters
Volume23
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Mar 2023

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