Resonant electron-lattice cooling in graphene
ORAL
Abstract
Controlling energy flows in solids through switchable electron-lattice cooling can grant access to a range of interesting and potentially useful energy transport phenomena. Here we discuss a unique switchable electron-lattice cooling mechanism arising in graphene due to phonon emission mediated by resonant scattering on defects in crystal lattice, which displays interesting analogy to the Purcell effect in optics. This mechanism strongly enhances the electron-phonon cooling rate, since non-equilibrium carriers in the presence of momentum recoil due to disorder can access a larger phonon phase space and emit phonons more efficiently. Resonant energy dependence of phonon emission translates into gate-tunable cooling rates, exhibiting giant enhancement of cooling occurring when the carrier energy is aligned with the electron resonance of the defect.
–
Presenters
-
Jian Feng Kong
MIT
Authors
-
Jian Feng Kong
MIT
-
Leonid Levitov
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, MIT, Physics Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-
Dorri Halbertal
Weizmann Institute of Science
-
Eli Zeldov
Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Weizmann Institute of Science