Commensurate Lattice Vector Dependent Thermal Conductivity of Twisted Bilayer Graphene

ORAL

Abstract

The in-plane thermal conductivity, as well as phonon dispersion of twisted bilayer graphene (TBG), are investigated as a function of temperature and rotation angle using both nonequilibrium molecular dynamics (NEMD) and density functional theory (DFT) combined with the phonon Boltzmann transport equation. The central result from the NEMD calculations is that the thermal conductivity decreases approximately linearly with the increasing lattice constant of the commensurate TBG unit cell. Comparisons of the phonon dispersions from both the DFT and NEMD calculations show that misorientation has the negligible effect on the low-energy phonon frequencies and velocities. However, the larger periodicity of TBG reduces the Brillouin zone size to the extent that the zone edge acoustic phonons are thermally populated allowing Umklapp scattering to reduce their lifetimes. This explanation is supported by DFT calculations of phonon-phonon lifetimes.

*This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under Award NSF EFRI-1433395. The ab initio simulations used the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE), supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant No. ACI-1548562 and allocation ID TG-DMR130081.

Presenters

  • Chenyang Li

    • University of California, Riverside

Authors

  • Chenyang Li

    • University of California, Riverside
  • Bishwajit Debnath

    • Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California Riverside
    • University of California, Riverside
  • Roger Lake

    • Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Riverside
    • University of California, Riverside
    • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Riverside