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Room temperature thermal rectification in suspended asymmetric graphene ribbon

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Abstract Thermal rectifiers are essential in optimizing heat dissipation in solid-state devices to enhance energy efficiency, reliability, and overall performance. In this study, we experimentally investigate the thermal rectification phenomenon in suspended asymmetric graphene ribbons (GRs). The asymmetry within the graphene is introduced by incorporating periodic parallel nanoribbons on one side of the GR while maintaining the other side in a pristine form. Our findings reveal a substantial thermal rectification effect in these asymmetric graphene devices, reaching up to 45% at room temperature and increasing further at lower environmental temperatures. This effect is attributed to a significant thermal conductivity contrast between pristine graphene and nanoribbon graphene within the asymmetric structure. We observe that the incorporation of nanoribbons leads to a notable reduction in thermal conductivity, primarily due to phonon scattering and bottleneck effects near the nanoribbon edges. These findings suggest that graphene structures exhibiting asymmetry, facilitated by parallel nanoribbons, hold promise for effective heat management at the nanoscale level and the development of practical phononic devices.
Title: Room temperature thermal rectification in suspended asymmetric graphene ribbon
Description:
Abstract Thermal rectifiers are essential in optimizing heat dissipation in solid-state devices to enhance energy efficiency, reliability, and overall performance.
In this study, we experimentally investigate the thermal rectification phenomenon in suspended asymmetric graphene ribbons (GRs).
The asymmetry within the graphene is introduced by incorporating periodic parallel nanoribbons on one side of the GR while maintaining the other side in a pristine form.
Our findings reveal a substantial thermal rectification effect in these asymmetric graphene devices, reaching up to 45% at room temperature and increasing further at lower environmental temperatures.
This effect is attributed to a significant thermal conductivity contrast between pristine graphene and nanoribbon graphene within the asymmetric structure.
We observe that the incorporation of nanoribbons leads to a notable reduction in thermal conductivity, primarily due to phonon scattering and bottleneck effects near the nanoribbon edges.
These findings suggest that graphene structures exhibiting asymmetry, facilitated by parallel nanoribbons, hold promise for effective heat management at the nanoscale level and the development of practical phononic devices.

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