Quantitative Mapping of Nanothermal Transport via Scanning Thermal Microscopy

Quantitative Mapping of Nanothermal Transport via Scanning Thermal Microscopy

  • Jean Spièce
Publisher:Springer NatureISBN 13: 9783030308131ISBN 10: 3030308138

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Quantitative Mapping of Nanothermal Transport via Scanning Thermal Microscopy is written by Jean Spièce and published by Springer Nature. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 3030308138 (ISBN 10) and 9783030308131 (ISBN 13).

The thesis tackles one of the most difficult problems of modern nanoscale science and technology - exploring what governs thermal phenomena at the nanoscale, how to measure the temperatures in devices just a few atoms across, and how to manage heat transport on these length scales. Nanoscale heat generated in microprocessor components of only a few tens of nanometres across cannot be effectively fed away, thus stalling the famous Moore's law of increasing computer speed, valid now for more than a decade. In this thesis, Jean Spièce develops a novel comprehensive experimental and analytical framework for high precision measurement of heat flows at the nanoscale using advanced scanning thermal microscopy (SThM) operating in ambient and vacuum environment, and reports the world’s first operation of cryogenic SThM. He applies the methodology described in the thesis to novel carbon-nanotube-based effective heat conductors, uncovers new phenomena of thermal transport in two- dimensional (2D) materials such as graphene and boron nitride, thereby discovering an entirely new paradigm of thermoelectric cooling and energy production using geometrical modification of 2D materials.