2 research outputs found
Effects of Surface Band Bending and Scattering on Thermoelectric Transport in Suspended Bismuth Telluride Nanoplates
A microdevice
was used to measure the in-plane thermoelectric properties
of suspended bismuth telluride nanoplates from 9 to 25 nm thick. The
results reveal a suppressed Seebeck coefficient together with a general
trend of decreasing electrical conductivity and thermal conductivity
with decreasing thickness. While the electrical conductivity of the
nanoplates is still within the range reported for bulk Bi<sub>2</sub>Te<sub>3</sub>, the total thermal conductivity for nanoplates less
than 20 nm thick is well below the reported bulk range. These results
are explained by the presence of surface band bending and diffuse
surface scattering of electrons and phonons in the nanoplates, where
pronounced n-type surface band bending can yield suppressed and even
negative Seebeck coefficient in unintentionally p-type doped nanoplates
Thermal Conductivity and Phonon Transport in Suspended Few-Layer Hexagonal Boron Nitride
The thermal conductivity of suspended few-layer hexagonal
boron
nitride (h-BN) was measured using a microbridge device with built-in
resistance thermometers. Based on the measured thermal resistance
values of 11–12 atomic layer h-BN samples with suspended lengths
ranging between 3 and 7.5 μm, the room-temperature thermal conductivity
of a 11-layer sample was found to be about 360 W m<sup>–1</sup> K<sup>–1</sup>, approaching the basal plane value reported
for bulk h-BN. The presence of a polymer residue layer on the sample
surface was found to decrease the thermal conductivity of a 5-layer
h-BN sample to be about 250 W m<sup>–1</sup> K<sup>–1</sup> at 300 K. Thermal conductivities for both the 5-layer and the 11-layer
samples are suppressed at low temperatures, suggesting increasing
scattering of low frequency phonons in thin h-BN samples by polymer
residue