Low-temperature nanoscale heat transport in a gadolinium iron garnet heterostructure probed by ultrafast x-ray diffraction
Deepankar Sri Gyan, Danny Mannix, Dina Carbone, James L. Sumpter,, Stephan Gepr\"ags, Maxim Dietlein, Rudolf Gross, Andrius Jurgilaitis,, Van-Thai Pham, H\'el\`ene Coudert-Alteirac, J\"orgen Larsson, Daniel Haskel,, J\"org Strempfer, and Paul G. Evans

TL;DR
This study uses ultrafast x-ray diffraction to measure low-temperature heat transport in a GdIG heterostructure, providing insights into interfacial thermal conductance relevant for spin caloritronics applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel ultrafast x-ray diffraction method to quantify interfacial thermal conductance at low temperatures in a metal/oxide heterostructure.
Findings
Interfacial thermal conductance comparable to previous reports.
Ultrafast diffraction effectively probes heat transport dynamics.
Thermal parameters aid in designing thermal transport devices.
Abstract
Time-resolved x-ray diffraction has been used to measure the low-temperature thermal transport properties of a Pt/Gd3Fe5O12//Gd3Ga5O12 metal/oxide heterostructure relevant to applications in spin caloritronics. A pulsed femtosecond optical signal produces a rapid temperature rise in the Pt layer, followed by heat transport into the Gd3Fe5O12 (GdIG) thin film and the Gd3Ga5O12 (GGG) substrate. The time dependence of x-ray diffraction from the GdIG layer was tracked using an accelerator-based femtosecond x-ray source. The ultrafast diffraction measurements probed the intensity of the GdIG (1 -1 2) x-ray reflection in a grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction geometry. The comparison of the variation of the diffracted x-ray intensity with a model including heat transport and the temperature dependence of the GdIG lattice parameter allows the thermal conductance of the Pt/GdIG and GdIG//GGG…
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