Low-dimensional phonon transport effects in ultra-narrow, disordered graphene nanoribbons
Hossein Karamitaheri, Mahdi Pourfath, Hans Kosina, and Neophytos, Neophytou

TL;DR
This study uses NEGF simulations to analyze how geometrical confinement and edge disorder affect phonon transport in ultra-narrow graphene nanoribbons, revealing spectrum-dependent behaviors and potential for semi-ballistic transport in certain modes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed spectral analysis of phonon transport in disordered ultra-narrow GNRs, highlighting how different phonon modes respond to edge roughness and confinement.
Findings
Low-energy acoustic modes are minimally affected by edge disorder.
Dense optical phonon regions maintain transmission in wider GNRs.
Sparse phonon modes tend to localize and are strongly suppressed by disorder.
Abstract
We investigate the influence of low-dimensionality and disorder in phonon transport in ultra-narrow armchair graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) using non-equilibrium Greens function (NEGF) simulation techniques. We specifically focus on how different parts of the phonon spectrum are influenced by geometrical confinement and line edge roughness. With the introduction of line edge roughness, the phonon transmission is reduced, but non-uniformly throughout the spectrum. We identify four distinct behaviors within the phonon spectrum in the presence of disorder: i) the low-energy, low-wavevector acoustic branches have very long mean-free-paths and are affected the least by edge disorder, even in the case of ultra-narrow W=1nm wide GNRs; ii) energy regions that consist of a dense population of relatively flat phonon modes (including the optical branches) are also not significantly affected, except…
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