Very thin film could help manage heat flow in future devices

Very thin film could help manage heat flow in future devices
Purdue researchers have discovered a characteristic of this film that could help control heat flow in electronics. Credit: Purdue University image/Jared Pike

Purdue University researchers have demonstrated the ability of a thin film to conduct heat on just its surfaces, identifying a potential solution to overheating in electronic devices such as phones and computers.

"When you try to make an electronic device, the dissipation is always a problem," said Xianfan Xu, Purdue's James J. and Carol L. Shuttleworth Professor of Mechanical Engineering. "So we are trying to provide an understanding of how heat can be dissipated in these future devices."

This thin film material is a topological insulator, which supports the flow of electrons on its surface but not in its interior. No study had yet tested whether the same were true for heat, until confirmed by research published on Jan. 23 in ACS Nano. Past research has speculated that topological insulators could be useful for the development of spintronic devices, which encode information through the spins of electrons as opposed to electrical charge in today's electronics.

The researchers found that the thinner the film is, the higher the . They also discovered that the ratio of to at the surface of the topological insulator materials can be more than 10 times higher than the Sommerfeld value, which is the value known for most metals and semiconductors determined by the Weidemann-Franz law. By conducting heat on just its surfaces rather than across the entire film, this material could prevent parts of a device from heating up or redirect heat.

Now, having identified this characteristic of heat transfer in , the next step is to figure out how to use them for manipulating heat flow.

"There are not many ways to control heat. It's not electricity, where you can turn it on and off," Xu said. "But now there might be a chance to do that."

More information: Zhe Luo et al. Large Enhancement of Thermal Conductivity and Lorenz Number in Topological Insulator Thin Films, ACS Nano (2018). DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b06430

Journal information: ACS Nano

Provided by Purdue University

Citation: Very thin film could help manage heat flow in future devices (2018, March 27) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2018-03-thin-future-devices.html
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