Anisotropic thermal transport in bulk hexagonal boron nitride
Puqing Jiang, Xin Qian, Ronggui Yang, and Lucas Lindsay

TL;DR
This study combines experimental measurements and theoretical modeling to analyze the anisotropic thermal conductivity of bulk hexagonal boron nitride across a range of temperatures, revealing unique temperature-dependent behaviors.
Contribution
It provides the first integrated experimental and theoretical analysis of h-BN's anisotropic thermal transport, including benchmark data and insights into phonon scattering mechanisms.
Findings
In-plane and through-plane thermal conductivities are accurately measured and modeled.
Unusual temperature dependence observed in through-plane thermal conductivity.
Phonon-isotope scattering significantly influences thermal transport in h-BN.
Abstract
Hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) has received great interest in recent years as a wide bandgap analog of graphene-derived systems. However, the thermal transport properties of h-BN, which can be critical for device reliability and functionality, are little studied both experimentally and theoretically. The primary challenge in the experimental measurements of the anisotropic thermal conductivity of h-BN is that typically sample size of h-BN single crystals is too small for conventional measurement techniques, as state-of-the-art technologies synthesize h-BN single crystals with lateral sizes only up to 2.5 mm and thickness up to 200 {\mu}m. Recently developed time-domain thermoreflectance (TDTR) techniques are suitable to measure the anisotropic thermal conductivity of such small samples, as it only requires a small area of 50x50 {\mu}m2 for the measurements. Accurate atomistic modeling…
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