ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Thermal resistances from interfaces impede heat dissipation in micro/nanoscale electronics, especially for high-power electronics. Despite the growing importance of understanding interfacial thermal transport, advanced thermal characterization techniques which can visualize thermal conductance across buried interfaces, especially for nonmetal-nonmetal interfaces, are still under development. This work reports a dual-modulation-frequency TDTR mapping technique to visualize the thermal conduction across buried semiconductor interfaces for beta-Ga2O3-SiC samples. Both the beta-Ga2O3 thermal conductivity and the buried beta-Ga2O3-SiC thermal boundary conductance (TBC) are visualized for an area of 200 um x 200 um. Areas with low TBC values ( smaller than 20 MW/m2-K) are successfully identified on the TBC map, which correspond to weakly bonded interfaces caused by high-temperature annealing. The steady-state temperature rise (detector voltage), usually ignored in TDTR measurements, is found to be able to probe TBC variations of the buried interfaces without the limit of thermal penetration depth. This technique can be applied to detect defects/voids in deeply buried heterogeneous interfaces non-destructively, and also opens a door for the visualization of thermal conductance in nanoscale nonhomogeneous structures.
Silicon carbide silicon carbide (SiC SiC) composites are often used in oxidizing environments at high temperatures. Measurements of the thermal conductance of the oxide layer provide a way to better understand the oxidation process with high spatial
Transient response of the spin Peltier effect (SPE) in a Pt/yttrium iron garnet junction system has been investigated by means of a lock-in thermoreflectance method. We applied an alternating charge current to the Pt layer to drive SPE through the sp
Angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES) is the main experimental tool to explore electronic structure of solids resolved in the electron momentum k . Soft-X-ray ARPES (SX-ARPES), operating in a photon energy range around 1 keV, benefits fro
Atomic precision advanced manufacturing (APAM) offers creation of donor devices in an atomically thin layer doped beyond the solid solubility limit, enabling unique device physics. This presents an opportunity to use APAM as a pathfinding platform to
We have measured photoemission spectra of SrTiO3/LaTiO3 superlattices with a topmost SrTiO3 layer of variable thickness. Finite coherent spectral weight with a clear Fermi cut-off was observed at chemically abrupt SrTiO3/LaTiO3 interfaces, indicating