Thermal Conductivity of Small Angle Twisted Bilayer Graphene

ORAL

Abstract

The effect of misorientation on the in-plane thermal conductivity of twisted BLG (TBG) is still poorly understood. The one experimental study found that interlayer misorientation could reduce the in-plane thermal conductivity by 50%. A recent theoretical study of TBG with the three smallest commensurate unit cells, 21.8o, 32.2o, and 13.2o, found that the thermal conductivity decreased approximately linearly as the commensurate lattice constant increased. What happens at smaller misorientation angles of 10o or less is still an open question. For this range of rotation angles, we perform large-scale, non-equilibrium molecular dynamics calculations of the thermal conductivity of TBG for twist angles down to 1.89o. The picture that emerges from this study is that the misorientation reduces the shear elastic constant C44 which increases the wrinkling of the TBG. The increased out-of-plane wrinkling then reduces the thermal conductivity.

*This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under awards 1307671 and 1433395. This work used the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) which is supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. ACI-1548562 and allocation ID TG-DMR130081.

Presenters

  • Roger Lake

    • University of California, Riverside
    • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Riverside
    • Physics & Astronomy, UCR

Authors

  • Chenyang Li

    • University of California, Riverside
  • Roger Lake

    • University of California, Riverside
    • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Riverside
    • Physics & Astronomy, UCR