Modulating the thermal conductivity in hexagonal boron nitride via controlled boron isotope concentration

Boron Nitride is one of the new exciting wide bandgap semiconductor materials which has emerged recently.
Modulating the thermal conductivity in hexagonal boron nitride via controlled boron isotope concentration
Like

Share this post

Choose a social network to share with, or copy the URL to share elsewhere

This is a representation of how your post may appear on social media. The actual post will vary between social networks

My group at the University of Bristol has great interest in developing and understanding heat transport in materials and devices. This is as most of today’s electronic and optoelectronic devices are limited by excessive device temperatures which degrade performance and reliability. When a good old friend of mine at Kansas State University, Jim Edgar, contacted me last year that his students managed to grow isotopically pure Boron Nitride we got very excited as this material to date never reached its expected high thermal conductivity; with the isotopically pure Boron Nitride we could demonstrate a thermal conductivity of 585 W/mK, twice that of copper, for the first time – pretty much in line with what theory predicted. We could also test and develop further a transient thermoreflectance technique we previous developed and pioneered for accurate thermal conductivity measurements. This is an easy to use technique to measure lateral and out-of-plane thermal conductivity of materials. Following this work, we now move forward to use the Boron Nitride to make high end electronic devices, but also by integrating it with other semiconductors. Boron Nitride should be able to conduct heat nicely away from many electronic materials when fully integrated. This will allow better performance devices and ultimately higher efficiency electronics which will save energy for a greener society.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s42005-019-0145-5

Please sign in or register for FREE

If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in

Follow the Topic

Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Technology and Engineering > Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Related Collections

With collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.

The superconducting diode effect

This collection aims to showcase the fundamental physics & current theoretical understanding of the superconducting diode effect and other nonreciprocal phenomena in superconductors.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: Jul 31, 2025

Swarm intelligence - Collective motions from biology to robotic

This cross-journal Collection between Nature Communications, Communications Engineering, Communications Physics, and Scientific Reports brings together the advances in swarm intelligence.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: May 31, 2025