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Anomalous thermal anisotropy of two-dimensional nanoplates of vertically grown MoS2

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Heat flow control plays a significant role in thermal management and energy conversion processes. Recently, two dimensional (2D) materials with unique anisotropic thermal properties are attracting a lot of attention,… Click to show full abstract

Heat flow control plays a significant role in thermal management and energy conversion processes. Recently, two dimensional (2D) materials with unique anisotropic thermal properties are attracting a lot of attention, as promising building blocks for molding the heat flow. Originated from its crystal structure, in most if not all the 2D materials, the thermal conductivity along the Z direction (kz) is much lower than x-y plane thermal conductivity (kxy). In this work, we demonstrate that 2D nanoplates of vertically grown molybdenum disulfide (VG MoS2) can have anomalous thermal anisotropy, in which kxy (about 0.83 W/m K at 300 K) is ∼1 order of magnitude lower than kz (about 9.2 W/m K at 300 K). Lattice dynamics analysis reveals that this anomalous thermal anisotropy can be attributed to the anisotropic phonon dispersion relations and the anisotropic phonon group velocities along different directions. The low kxy can be attributed to the weak phonon coupling near the x-y plane interfaces. It is expected th...

Keywords: thermal anisotropy; two dimensional; nanoplates vertically; vertically grown; anomalous thermal

Journal Title: Applied Physics Letters
Year Published: 2017

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