Ultralow thermal conductivity in Electrolessly Etched (EE) Silicon Nanowires

ORAL

Abstract

EE process produces single-crystalline Silicon nanowires with rough walls. We use suspended structures to directly compute the heat transfer through single nanowires. Nanowires with diameters less than the mean free path of phonons impede transport by boundary scattering. The roughness acts as a secondary scattering mechanism to further reduce phonon transport. By controlling the amount of roughness it is possible to push limits to the extent that nanowire conductance close to quanta of thermal conductance,${\pi k_B^2 T} \mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {{\pi k_B^2 T} {6\hbar }}} \right. \kern-\nulldelimiterspace} {6\hbar }$ is observed. Traditionally, the lower limit of conductivity is amorphous Silicon at 1 W/mK at room temperature. The measured conductivity of our nanostructures challenges even this amorphous limit pointing towards previously unstudied mechanisms of thermal resistance. We measure thermal conductivity of $\sim $150nm diameter EE wires to be $\sim $1 W/mK.

*DOE, BES, A-STAR Singapore, Microlab at UC Berkeley, Molecular Foundry at Lawrence Berkeley National Labs

Authors

  • Kedar Hippalgaonkar

    • Dept of Mech Eng, UC Berkeley
  • Renkun Chen

    • Dept of Mech Eng, UC Berkeley
  • Bair Budaev

    • Dept of Mech Eng, UC Berkeley
  • Jinyao Tang

    • Dept of Chem, UC Berkeley
  • Sean Andrews

    • Dept of Chem, UC Berkeley
  • Padraig Murphy

    • Dept of Phys, UC Berkeley
  • Subroto Mukerjee

    • University of California, Berkeley
    • Dept of Phys, UC Berkeley
  • Joel Moore

    • Dept of Phys, UC Berkeley
  • Peidong Yang

    • Dept of Chem, UC Berkeley
  • Arun Majumdar

    • Deptartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of California - Berkeley
    • Dept of Mech Eng, UC Berkeley
    • University of California at Berkeley
    • Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720