Slow imbalance relaxation and thermoelectric transport in graphene
Matthew S. Foster, Igor L. Aleiner

TL;DR
This paper investigates how slow carrier imbalance relaxation affects the thermal conductivity and thermoelectric power in monolayer graphene within the hydrodynamic regime, highlighting the role of sample length and contacts.
Contribution
It introduces a model accounting for slow imbalance relaxation and contact effects, revealing size-dependent thermoelectric behavior in graphene.
Findings
Thermoelectric response depends on the ratio of sample length to an intrinsic length scale l_Q.
For short samples, TC and TEP approach zero imbalance limits.
For long samples, TC and TEP reach intrinsic values characteristic of infinite imbalance relaxation.
Abstract
We compute the electronic component of the thermal conductivity (TC) and the thermoelectric power (TEP) of monolayer graphene, within the hydrodynamic regime, taking into account the slow rate of carrier population imbalance relaxation. Interband electron-hole generation and recombination processes are inefficient due to the non-decaying nature of the relativistic energy spectrum. As a result, a population imbalance of the conduction and valence bands is generically induced upon the application of a thermal gradient. We show that the thermoelectric response of a graphene monolayer depends upon the ratio of the sample length to an intrinsic length scale l_Q, set by the imbalance relaxation rate. At the same time, we incorporate the crucial influence of the metallic contacts required for the thermopower measurement (under open circuit boundary conditions), since carrier exchange with the…
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