Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene

Borophene: exceptional thermal conductance Theoretical calculations reveal that borophene has a very high thermal conductance, higher than that of graphene, which currently holds the record among 2D materials. A team led by Yong-Wei Zhang at A*STAR in Singapore demonstrated that thermal transport in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hangbo Zhou, Yongqing Cai, Gang Zhang, Yong-Wei Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-06-01
Series:npj 2D Materials and Applications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-017-0018-2
id doaj-0140688a06ea45238ea270ca97f9d571
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0140688a06ea45238ea270ca97f9d5712021-04-02T16:13:46ZengNature Publishing Groupnpj 2D Materials and Applications2397-71322017-06-01111710.1038/s41699-017-0018-2Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer boropheneHangbo Zhou0Yongqing Cai1Gang Zhang2Yong-Wei Zhang3Institute of High Performance Computing, A*STARInstitute of High Performance Computing, A*STARInstitute of High Performance Computing, A*STARInstitute of High Performance Computing, A*STARBorophene: exceptional thermal conductance Theoretical calculations reveal that borophene has a very high thermal conductance, higher than that of graphene, which currently holds the record among 2D materials. A team led by Yong-Wei Zhang at A*STAR in Singapore demonstrated that thermal transport in borophene is highly anisotropic, that is, heat is transported more efficiently in one direction than in the perpendicular one. They attributed this behavior to the fact that phonons—the quanta of the vibrations of the crystal lattice—tend to travel along a specific direction, because the bonds between boron atoms are particularly strong in that direction. The resulting thermal conductance is higher than that of any other 2D material. An improved understanding of thermal transport is relevant for applications in heat dissipation and thermal management.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-017-0018-2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hangbo Zhou
Yongqing Cai
Gang Zhang
Yong-Wei Zhang
spellingShingle Hangbo Zhou
Yongqing Cai
Gang Zhang
Yong-Wei Zhang
Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene
npj 2D Materials and Applications
author_facet Hangbo Zhou
Yongqing Cai
Gang Zhang
Yong-Wei Zhang
author_sort Hangbo Zhou
title Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene
title_short Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene
title_full Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene
title_fullStr Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene
title_full_unstemmed Superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene
title_sort superior lattice thermal conductance of single-layer borophene
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series npj 2D Materials and Applications
issn 2397-7132
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Borophene: exceptional thermal conductance Theoretical calculations reveal that borophene has a very high thermal conductance, higher than that of graphene, which currently holds the record among 2D materials. A team led by Yong-Wei Zhang at A*STAR in Singapore demonstrated that thermal transport in borophene is highly anisotropic, that is, heat is transported more efficiently in one direction than in the perpendicular one. They attributed this behavior to the fact that phonons—the quanta of the vibrations of the crystal lattice—tend to travel along a specific direction, because the bonds between boron atoms are particularly strong in that direction. The resulting thermal conductance is higher than that of any other 2D material. An improved understanding of thermal transport is relevant for applications in heat dissipation and thermal management.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-017-0018-2
work_keys_str_mv AT hangbozhou superiorlatticethermalconductanceofsinglelayerborophene
AT yongqingcai superiorlatticethermalconductanceofsinglelayerborophene
AT gangzhang superiorlatticethermalconductanceofsinglelayerborophene
AT yongweizhang superiorlatticethermalconductanceofsinglelayerborophene
_version_ 1721557460362199040