Graphene/biphenylene heterostructure: Interfacial thermal conduction and thermal rectification

Author:

Ren Kai1ORCID,Chen Yan2ORCID,Qin Huasong2ORCID,Feng Wenlin3,Zhang Gang4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Mechanical and Electronic Engineering, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210037, China

2. Laboratory for Multiscale Mechanics and Medical Science, SV LAB, School of Aerospace, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an 710049, China

3. Department of Physics and Energy, Chongqing University of Technology, Chongqing 400054, China

4. Institute of High Performance Computing, A*STAR, Singapore 138632, Singapore

Abstract

The allotrope of carbon, biphenylene, was prepared experimentally recently [Fan et al., Science 372, 852–856 (2021)]. In this Letter, we perform first-principles simulation to understand the bonding nature and structure stability of the possible in-plane heterostructure built by graphene and biphenylene. We found that the graphene–biphenylene in-plane heterostructure only exhibits along the armchair direction, which is connected together by strong covalent bonds and energetically stable. Then, the non-equilibrium molecular dynamics calculations are used to explore the interfacial thermal properties of the graphene/biphenylene heterostructure. It is found that the graphene/biphenylene in-plane heterostructure possesses an excellent interfacial thermal conductance of 2.84 × 109 W·K−1·m−2 at room temperature. Importantly, the interfacial thermal conductance presents different temperature dependence under opposite heat flux direction. This anomalous temperature dependence results in increased thermal rectification ratio with temperature about 40% at 350 K. This work provides comprehensive insight into the graphene–biphenylene heterostructure and suggests a route for designing a thermal rectifier with high efficiency.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)

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