22 research outputs found

    Thermal Properties of Graphene, Carbon Nanotubes and Nanostructured Carbon Materials

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    Recent years witnessed a rapid growth of interest of scientific and engineering communities to thermal properties of materials. Carbon allotropes and derivatives occupy a unique place in terms of their ability to conduct heat. The room-temperature thermal conductivity of carbon materials span an extraordinary large range - of over five orders of magnitude - from the lowest in amorphous carbons to the highest in graphene and carbon nanotubes. I review thermal and thermoelectric properties of carbon materials focusing on recent results for graphene, carbon nanotubes and nanostructured carbon materials with different degrees of disorder. A special attention is given to the unusual size dependence of heat conduction in two-dimensional crystals and, specifically, in graphene. I also describe prospects of applications of graphene and carbon materials for thermal management of electronics.Comment: Review Paper; 37 manuscript pages; 4 figures and 2 boxe

    Spectral control of elastic dynamics in metallic nano-cavities

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    Abstract We show how the elastic response of metallic nano-cavities can be tailored by tuning the interplay with an underlying phononic superlattice. In particular, we exploit ultrafast optical excitation in order to address a resonance mode in a tungsten thin film, grown on top of a periodic MgO/ZrO2 multilayer. Setting up a simple theoretical model, we can explain our findings by the coupling of the resonance in the tungsten to an evanescent surface mode of the superlattice. To demonstrate a second potential benefit of our findings besides characterization of elastic properties of multilayer samples, we show by micromagnetic simulation how a similar structure can be utilized for magneto-elastic excitation of exchange-dominated spin waves
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