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Metal-Level Thermally Conductive yet Soft Graphene Thermal Interface Materials

Authors :
Qingwei Yan
Ching-Ping Wong
Jing Kong
Jianbo Wu
Wen Dai
Yagang Yao
Yan Wang
Shigeo Maruyama
Le Lv
Shiyu Du
Nan Jiang
Jingyao Gao
Tengfei Ma
Jinhong Yu
Hao Hou
Rong Sun
Qiuping Wei
Cheng-Te Lin
Xue Tan
Source :
ACS Nano. 13:11561-11571
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2019.

Abstract

Along with the technology evolution for dense integration of high-power, high-frequency devices in electronics, the accompanying interfacial heat transfer problem leads to urgent demands for advanced thermal interface materials (TIMs) with both high through-plane thermal conductivity and good compressibility. Most metals have satisfactory thermal conductivity but relatively high compressive modulus, and soft silicones are typically thermal insulators (0.3 W m-1 K-1). Currently, it is a great challenge to develop a soft material with the thermal conductivity up to metal level for TIM application. This study solves this problem by constructing a graphene-based microstructure composed of mainly vertical graphene and a thin cap of horizontal graphene layers on both the top and bottom sides through a mechanical machining process to manipulate the stacked architecture of conventional graphene paper. The resultant graphene monolith has an ultrahigh through-plane thermal conductivity of 143 W m-1 K-1, exceeding that of many metals, and a low compressive modulus of 0.87 MPa, comparable to that of silicones. In the actual TIM performance measurement, the system cooling efficiency with our graphene monolith as TIM is 3 times as high as that of the state-of-the-art commercial TIM, demonstrating the superior ability to solve the interfacial heat transfer issues in electronic systems.

Details

ISSN :
1936086X and 19360851
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Nano
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ee46e59446f77839106c56c8ca4949a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.9b05163