High Throughput Nanoimaging of Thermal Conductivity and Interfacial Thermal Conductance

Thermal properties of materials are often determined by measuring thermalization processes; however, such measurements at the nanoscale are challenging because they require high sensitivity concurrently with high temporal and spatial resolutions. Here, we develop an optomechanical cantilever probe a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nano letters 2022-06, Vol.22 (11), p.4325-4332
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Mingkang, Ramer, Georg, Perez-Morelo, Diego J., Pavlidis, Georges, Schwartz, Jeffrey J., Yu, Liya, Ilic, Robert, Aksyuk, Vladimir A., Centrone, Andrea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Thermal properties of materials are often determined by measuring thermalization processes; however, such measurements at the nanoscale are challenging because they require high sensitivity concurrently with high temporal and spatial resolutions. Here, we develop an optomechanical cantilever probe and customize an atomic force microscope with low detection noise ≈1 fm/Hz1/2 over a wide (>100 MHz) bandwidth that measures thermalization dynamics with ≈10 ns temporal resolution, ≈35 nm spatial resolution, and high sensitivity. This setup enables fast nanoimaging of thermal conductivity (η) and interfacial thermal conductance (G) with measurement throughputs ≈6000× faster than conventional macroscale-resolution time-domain thermoreflectance acquiring the full sample thermalization. As a proof-of-principle demonstration, 100 × 100 pixel maps of η and G of a polymer particle are obtained in 200 s with a small relative uncertainty (
ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c00337