Experimental study of electron and phonon dynamics in nanoscale materials by ultrafast laser time-domain spectroscopy
Xiaohan Shen

TL;DR
This paper investigates electron and phonon dynamics in nanoscale materials using ultrafast laser time-domain spectroscopy, addressing heat dissipation issues critical for nanoelectronic device development.
Contribution
It provides experimental insights into size-dependent electron-phonon interactions and phonon transport in nanoscale materials, which are largely unexplored.
Findings
Electron-phonon scattering increases with reduced size.
Phonon transport exhibits size-dependent behavior.
Ultrafast spectroscopy reveals carrier dynamics in nanoscale regimes.
Abstract
With the rapid advances in the development of nanotechnology, nowadays, the sizes of elementary unit, i.e. transistor, of micro- and nanoelectronic devices are well deep into nanoscale. For the pursuit of cheaper and faster nanoscale electronic devices, the size of transistors keeps scaling down. As the miniaturization of the nanoelectronic devices, the electrical resistivity increases dramatically, resulting rapid growth in the heat generation. The heat generation and limited thermal dissipation in nanoscale materials have become a critical problem in the development of the next generation nanoelectronic devices. Copper (Cu) is widely used conducting material in nanoelectronic devices, and the electron-phonon scattering is the dominant contributor to the resistivity in Cu nanowires at room temperature. Meanwhile, phonons are the main carriers of heat in insulators, intrinsic and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Semiconductor materials and devices · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
