Graphene Heat-Transfer Riddle Unravelled

Researchers have solved the long-standing conundrum of how the boundary between grains of graphene affects heat conductivity in thin films of the miracle substance — bringing developers a step closer to being able to engineer films at a scale useful for cooling microelectronic devices and hundreds of other nano-tech applications.

Written byUniversity of Illinois at Chicago
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The study, by researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago, the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and Boise State University, is published online in Nano Letters.

Since its discovery, graphene – a single layer of carbon atoms linked in a chicken-wire pattern – has attracted intense interest for its phenomenal ability to conduct heat and electricity. Virtually every nanotech device could benefit from graphene’s extraordinary ability to dissipate heat and optimize electronic function, says Poya Yasaei, UIC graduate student in mechanical and industrial engineering and first author on the paper.

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