Phonon black-body radiation limit for heat dissipation in electronics
Journal article, 2015

Thermal dissipation at the active region of electronic devices is a fundamental process of considerable importance. Inadequate heat dissipation can lead to prohibitively large temperature rises that degrade performance, and intensive efforts are under way to mitigate this self-heating. At room temperature, thermal resistance is due to scattering, often by defects and interfaces in the active region, that impedes the transport of phonons. Here, we demonstrate that heat dissipation in widely used cryogenic electronic devices instead occurs by phonon black-body radiation with the complete absence of scattering, leading to large self-heating at cryogenic temperatures and setting a key limiton the noise floor. Our result has important implications for the many fields that require ultralow-noise electronic devices.

phonon black-body radiation

electronics

Heat dissipation

cryogenic

Author

Joel Schleeh

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Microwave Electronics

GigaHertz Centre

J. Mateos

University of Salamanca

Ignacio Íñiguez-De-La-Torre

University of Salamanca

Niklas Wadefalk

GigaHertz Centre

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Microwave Electronics

Per-Åke Nilsson

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Microwave Electronics

GigaHertz Centre

Jan Grahn

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Microwave Electronics

GigaHertz Centre

A. J. Minnich

California Institute of Technology (Caltech)

Nature Materials

1476-1122 (ISSN) 1476-4660 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 2 187-192

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Infrastructure

Nanofabrication Laboratory

Subject Categories

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

DOI

10.1038/NMAT4126

More information

Latest update

9/3/2018 1