AIP Advances (Dec 2016)

Thermal transport in suspended silicon membranes measured by laser-induced transient gratings

  • A. Vega-Flick,
  • R. A. Duncan,
  • J. K. Eliason,
  • J. Cuffe,
  • J. A. Johnson,
  • J.-P. M. Peraud,
  • L. Zeng,
  • Z. Lu,
  • A. A. Maznev,
  • E. N. Wang,
  • J. J. Alvarado-Gil,
  • M. Sledzinska,
  • C. M. Sotomayor Torres,
  • G. Chen,
  • K. A. Nelson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4968610
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 12
pp. 121903 – 121903-13

Abstract

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Studying thermal transport at the nanoscale poses formidable experimental challenges due both to the physics of the measurement process and to the issues of accuracy and reproducibility. The laser-induced transient thermal grating (TTG) technique permits non-contact measurements on nanostructured samples without a need for metal heaters or any other extraneous structures, offering the advantage of inherently high absolute accuracy. We present a review of recent studies of thermal transport in nanoscale silicon membranes using the TTG technique. An overview of the methodology, including an analysis of measurements errors, is followed by a discussion of new findings obtained from measurements on both “solid” and nanopatterned membranes. The most important results have been a direct observation of non-diffusive phonon-mediated transport at room temperature and measurements of thickness-dependent thermal conductivity of suspended membranes across a wide thickness range, showing good agreement with first-principles-based theory assuming diffuse scattering at the boundaries. Measurements on a membrane with a periodic pattern of nanosized holes (135nm) indicated fully diffusive transport and yielded thermal diffusivity values in agreement with Monte Carlo simulations. Based on the results obtained to-date, we conclude that room-temperature thermal transport in membrane-based silicon nanostructures is now reasonably well understood.