Establishment of a new technique or extension of an existing technique for thermal and thermoelectric measurements to a more challenging system is an important task to explore the thermal and thermoelectric properties...Establishment of a new technique or extension of an existing technique for thermal and thermoelectric measurements to a more challenging system is an important task to explore the thermal and thermoelectric properties of various materials and systems. The bottleneck lies in the challenges in measuring the thermal contact resistance. In this work, we applied electron beam self-heating technique to derive the intrinsic thermal conductivity of suspended Molybdenum Disulfide (MoS2) ribbons and the thermal contact resistance, with which the interracial thermal resistance between few-layer MoS2 and Pt electrodes was calculated. The measured room temperature thermal conductivity of MoS2 is around -30 W/(m K), while the estimated interracial thermal resistance is around -2 × 10 -6 m-2 K/W. Our experiments extend a useful branch in application of this technique for studying thermal properties of suspended layered ribbons and have potential application in investigating the interracial thermal resistance of different twodimensional (2D) heterojunctions.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(11674245 and 11334007)Shanghai Committee of Science and Technology in China(17142202100 and 17ZR1447900)supported by A*STAR Pharos Funding from the Science and Engineering Research Council of Singapore(Grant No.152 72 00015)
文摘Establishment of a new technique or extension of an existing technique for thermal and thermoelectric measurements to a more challenging system is an important task to explore the thermal and thermoelectric properties of various materials and systems. The bottleneck lies in the challenges in measuring the thermal contact resistance. In this work, we applied electron beam self-heating technique to derive the intrinsic thermal conductivity of suspended Molybdenum Disulfide (MoS2) ribbons and the thermal contact resistance, with which the interracial thermal resistance between few-layer MoS2 and Pt electrodes was calculated. The measured room temperature thermal conductivity of MoS2 is around -30 W/(m K), while the estimated interracial thermal resistance is around -2 × 10 -6 m-2 K/W. Our experiments extend a useful branch in application of this technique for studying thermal properties of suspended layered ribbons and have potential application in investigating the interracial thermal resistance of different twodimensional (2D) heterojunctions.