Extremely anisotropic van der Waals thermal conductors
Journal article, 2021

The densification of integrated circuits requires thermal management strategies and high thermal conductivity materials1–3. Recent innovations include the development of materials with thermal conduction anisotropy, which can remove hotspots along the fast-axis direction and provide thermal insulation along the slow axis4,5. However, most artificially engineered thermal conductors have anisotropy ratios much smaller than those seen in naturally anisotropic materials. Here we report extremely anisotropic thermal conductors based on large-area van der Waals thin films with random interlayer rotations, which produce a room-temperature thermal anisotropy ratio close to 900 in MoS2, one of the highest ever reported. This is enabled by the interlayer rotations that impede the through-plane thermal transport, while the long-range intralayer crystallinity maintains high in-plane thermal conductivity. We measure ultralow thermal conductivities in the through-plane direction for MoS2 (57 ± 3 mW m−1 K−1) and WS2 (41 ± 3 mW m−1 K−1) films, and we quantitatively explain these values using molecular dynamics simulations that reveal one-dimensional glass-like thermal transport. Conversely, the in-plane thermal conductivity in these MoS2 films is close to the single-crystal value. Covering nanofabricated gold electrodes with our anisotropic films prevents overheating of the electrodes and blocks heat from reaching the device surface. Our work establishes interlayer rotation in crystalline layered materials as a new degree of freedom for engineering-directed heat transport in solid-state systems.

Author

Shi En Kim

University of Chicago

Fauzia Mujid

University of Chicago

Akash Rai

University of Illinois

Fredrik Eriksson

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Joonki Suh

University of Chicago

Preeti Poddar

University of Chicago

Ariana Ray

Cornell University

Chibeom Park

University of Chicago

Erik Fransson

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Yu Zhong

University of Chicago

David A. Muller

Cornell University

Paul Erhart

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

David G. Cahill

University of Illinois

Jiwoong Park

University of Chicago

Nature

0028-0836 (ISSN) 1476-4687 (eISSN)

Vol. 597 7878 660-665

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Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Materials Science

Infrastructure

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

Subject Categories

Textile, Rubber and Polymeric Materials

Materials Chemistry

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1038/s41586-021-03867-8

More information

Latest update

12/21/2023