Elasticity reshapes heat flow in graphene
Navaneetha K. Ravichandran

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that elastic effects in graphene significantly influence heat flow by restoring phonon quasiparticles and reducing scattering, thereby enhancing thermal conductivity and phonon hydrodynamics.
Contribution
It reveals how elastic bending rigidity renormalization in graphene alters phonon scattering, linking macroscopic elasticity to microscopic thermal transport mechanisms.
Findings
Elastic bending rigidity renormalization restores phonon quasiparticles.
Reduced Umklapp scattering enhances thermal conductivity.
Strengthened phonon hydrodynamics in suspended graphene.
Abstract
Classical thermal transport theories that preserve rotational symmetry, predict strong anharmonic scattering of out-of-plane lattice vibrational modes called flexural phonons in flat suspended graphene sheets. Such strong scattering processes cause a breakdown of the phonon quasiparticle picture, which remains valid only when several cycles of lattice vibrations occur before the mode decays. Here we show that the renormalization of elastic bending rigidity (), caused by the coupling between the in-plane and the out-of-plane thermal lattice fluctuations, restores phonon quasiparticles in suspended graphene. Importantly, this -renormalization weakens the momentum-dissipating Umklapp phonon scattering processes, resulting in improved thermal conductivity and amplified phonon hydrodynamics in suspended graphene. Our results unveil a previously-unrecognized connection between the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
