The Electronic Thermal Conductivity of Graphene

Graphene, as a semimetal with the largest known thermal conductivity, is an ideal system to study the interplay between electronic and lattice contributions to thermal transport. While the total electrical and thermal conductivity have been extensively investigated, a detailed first-principles study...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nano letters 2016-04, Vol.16 (4), p.2439-2443
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Tae Yun, Park, Cheol-Hwan, Marzari, Nicola
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container_title Nano letters
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creator Kim, Tae Yun
Park, Cheol-Hwan
Marzari, Nicola
description Graphene, as a semimetal with the largest known thermal conductivity, is an ideal system to study the interplay between electronic and lattice contributions to thermal transport. While the total electrical and thermal conductivity have been extensively investigated, a detailed first-principles study of its electronic thermal conductivity is still missing. Here, we first characterize the electron–phonon intrinsic contribution to the electronic thermal resistivity of graphene as a function of doping using electronic and phonon dispersions and electron–phonon couplings calculated from first-principles at the level of density-functional theory and many-body perturbation theory (GW). Then, we include extrinsic electron-impurity scattering using low-temperature experimental estimates. Under these conditions, we find that the in-plane electronic thermal conductivity κe of doped graphene is ∼300 W/mK at room temperature, independently of doping. This result is much larger than expected and comparable to the total thermal conductivity of typical metals, contributing ∼10% to the total thermal conductivity of bulk graphene. Notably, in samples whose physical or domain sizes are of the order of few micrometers or smaller, the relative contribution coming from the electronic thermal conductivity is more important than in the bulk limit, because lattice thermal conductivity is much more sensitive to sample or grain size at these scales. Last, when electron-impurity scattering effects are included we find that the electronic thermal conductivity is reduced by 30 to 70%. We also find that the Wiedemann–Franz law is broadly satisfied at low and high temperatures but with the largest deviations of 20–50% around room temperature.
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subjects Doping
Electronics
Graphene
Heat transfer
Lattices
Lorenz number
Scattering
Thermal conductivity
title The Electronic Thermal Conductivity of Graphene
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