Nanoscale thermal phenomena are explored for applications in nanoelectronics and energy conversion. These include conventional and unconventional nanoscale devices, neuromorphic devices, molecular electronics and thermoelectricity. We aim to explore the engineering and physics of thermal processes at the nanoscale need to be explored in detail to take full advantage of the rich phenomena and to design thermal devices. The metrology associated with thermal transport at the nanoscale requires sophisticated tools and methods. Our experimental setups benefit from an optimal lab environment inside IBM’s noisefree labs.

High-reso­lu­tion ther­mo­me­try tech­niques are es­sen­tial for un­der­stand­ing lo­cal ther­mal non-equi­li­bri­um pro­ces­ses in many scaled de­vices for logic, stor­age and energy conversion.

—IBM scientist Bernd Gotsmann

Thermometry

Imaging temperature fields at the nanoscale is a central challenge in various areas of science and technology. Nanoscopic hot spots, such as those observed in integrated circuits or plasmonic nanostructures, can locally modify the properties of matter, govern physical processes, and activate chemical reactions.

Specifically, future transistors are expected to be subject to serious self-heating problems. In these devices, heat has to be dissipated across many interfaces of dissimilar materials, such as semiconductors, metals and oxides. As thermal impedance mismatches between adjacent materials and confined geometries (thin films, nanowires) limit thermal transport, device-level thermal design has become necessary.

We have developed temperature mapping techniques based on scanning thermal microscopy to measure the self-heating of nanodevices with resolutions in the nanometer regime.

Webinar

Introducing the thermometry method developed at IBM Research

Research scientist Fabian Koenemann explains the thermometry method in the context of work done on the EU H2020 project CONNECT

Heat transport

At the nanoscale, heat transport is strongly influenced by boundaries, interfaces and contacts. Nanostructured and molecular materials have specific thermal transport properties, which can be tuned for various applications. We study thermal conductance through nanoscale mechanical contacts, through molecules or vacuum gaps using scanning thermal microscopy, and through nanowire devices using MEMS-based sensors.
[ More ]

Heat transport through atomic contacts

N. Mosso et al.
Nature Nanotechnology 12, 430-433, 2017.

Heat transport and dissipation at the nanoscale severely limit the scaling of high-performance electronic devices and circuits. Metallic atomic junctions serve as model systems to probe electrical and thermal transport down to the atomic level as well as quantum effects that occur in one-dimensional (1D) systems. We report heat-transfer measurements through atomic junctions and analyse the thermal conductance of single-atom gold contacts at room temperature. Simultaneous measurements of charge and heat transport reveal the proportionality of electrical and thermal conductance, quantized with the respective conductance quanta. This constitutes a verification of the Wiedemann–Franz law at the atomic scale.

We use MEMS-based sensors to measure the thermal transport through micro-and nanoscale materials such as nanowires, nanotubes or micro-ribbons.
[ More ]

Full thermoelectric characterization of InAs nanowires using MEMS heater/sensors

S.F. Karg et al.
Nanotechnology 25(30) 305702, 2014.

Precise measurements of a complete set of thermoelectric parameters on a single indium-arsenide nanowire (NW) have been performed using highly sensitive, micro-fabricated sensing devices based on the heater/sensor principle.

 

 

 

Materials & devices

Energy conversion processes between heat and electricity are at the heart of electricity generation and energy harvesting and of heat dissipation in electronic devices and cooling. We are exploring thermoelectric energy conversion in semiconducting nanostructures, pyroelectricity and electro-thermal effects in self-heated nanodevices.

Evidence of mixed axial-gravitational anomaly in thermo-electric transport in the Weyl semimetal NbP

Weyl semimetals are materials where electrons behave effectively as a kind of massless relativistic particles known as Weyl fermions. These particles occur in two flavors, or chiralities, and are subject to quantum anomalies, the breaking of a conservation law by quantum fluctuations. For instance, the number of Weyl fermions of each chirality is not independently conserved in parallel electric and magnetic field, a phenomenon known as the chiral anomaly. In addition, an underlying curved spacetime provides a distinct contribution to a chiral imbalance, an effect known as the mixed axial-gravitational anomaly, which remains experimentally elusive. However, the presence of a mixed gauge-gravitational anomaly has recently been tied to thermoelectrical transport in a magnetic field, even in flat spacetime, opening the door to experimentally probe such type of anomalies in Weyl semimetals. Using a temperature gradient, we experimentally observe a positive longitudinal magnetothermoelectric conductance (PMTC) in the Weyl semimetal NbP for collinear temperature gradients and magnetic fields (rT kB) that vanishes in the ultra quantum limit. This observation is consistent with the presence of a mixed axial-gravitational anomaly.
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Experimental signatures of the mixed axial–gravitational anomaly in the Weyl semimetal NbP

J. Gooth et al.
Nature 547, 324–327, 2017.

Using a temperature gradient, we observe experimentally a positive magneto-thermoelectric conductance in the Weyl semimetal niobium phosphide (NbP) for collinear temperature gradients and magnetic fields that vanishes in the ultra-quantum limit, when only a single Landau level is occupied. This observation is consistent with the presence of a mixed axial–gravitational anomaly, providing clear evidence for a theoretical concept that has so far eluded experimental detection.

See also IBM Blog “Scientists Observe Gravitational Anomaly on Earth

 

Transport at the Planckian bound of dissipation

We observed signatures of hydrodynamic electron flow in the Weyl semimetal tungsten diphosphide (WP2). Using thermal and magneto-electric transport experiments, we find indications of the transition from a conventional metallic state at higher temperatures to a hydrodynamic electron fluid below 20 K. The hydrodynamic regime is characterized by a viscosity-induced dependence of the electrical resistivity on the square of the channel width and by a strong violation of the Wiedemann–Franz law. From magneto-hydrodynamic experiments and complementary Hall measurements, the relaxation times for momentum relaxing and conserving processes are extracted. Following the uncertainty principle, both electrical and thermal transport are limited by the Planckian bound of dissipation, independent of the underlying transport regime.
[ More ]

Electrical and Thermal Transport at the Planckian Bound of Dissipation in the Hydrodynamic Electron Fluid of WP2

J. Gooth et al.
arXiv:1706.05925, 2018.

Materials with strongly-correlated electrons exhibit interesting phenomena such as metal-insulator transitions and high-temperature superconductivity. In stark contrast to ordinary metals, electron transport in these materials is thought to resemble the flow of viscous fluids. Despite their differences, it is predicted that transport in both, conventional and correlated materials, is fundamentally limited by the uncertainty principle applied to energy dissipation. We discover hydrodynamic electron flow in the Weyl-semimetal tungsten phosphide (WP2). Using thermal and magneto-electric transport experiments, we observe the transition from a conventional metallic state, at higher temperatures, to a hydrodynamic electron fluid below 20 K. The hydrodynamic regime is characterized by a viscosity-induced dependence of the electrical resistivity on the square of the channel width, and by the observation of a strong violation of the Wiedemann-Franz law. From magneto-hydrodynamic experiments and complementary Hall measurements, the relaxation times for momentum and thermal energy dissipating processes are extracted. Following the uncertainty principle, both are limited by the Planckian bound of dissipation, independent of the underlying transport regime.

Local thermometry of self-heated nanoscale devices

Hot spots with dimensions of only a few nanometers form in numerous nanoelectronic devices. Based on recent advances in spatial resolution, these hotspots can now be studied by means of Scanning Thermal Microscopy (SThM). Here, we discuss SThM for nanoscale thermometry in comparison with other established thermometry techniques. In situ measurements of semiconductor channels for logic, and phase change memory devices are used to demonstrate today’s measurement capabilities. Temperature fields characterize not only energy dissipation in intact devices but can also serve to identify device failure and fabrication issues.
[ More ]

Local thermometry of self-heated nanoscale devices

F. Menges et al.
in Proc. IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), 2016.

Local thermometry

Ask the experts

Bernd Gotsmann

Bernd Gotsmann
IBM Research scientist

Andrea Gemma

Andrea Gemma
PhD student

	
Siegfried Karg

Siegfried Karg
IBM Research scientist

Heinz Schmid

Heinz Schmid
IBM Research scientist

Nele Harnack

Nele Harnack
PhD student

 

Publications

[1] “Combined scanning probe electronic and thermal characterization of an indium arsenide nanowire
Tino Wagner et al.
Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 9, 129-136, 2018.

[2] “Electrical and Thermal Transport at the Planckian Bound of Dissipation in the Hydrodynamic Electron Fluid of WP2
J. Gooth et al.
arXiv:1706.05925, 2017.

[3] “Experimental signatures of the mixed axial-gravitational anomaly in the Weyl semimetal NbP
J. Gooth et al.
arXiv:1703.10682, 2017.

[4] “Heat transport through atomic contacts
N. Mosso et al.
Nature Nanotechnology 72, 430-433, 2017.

[5] “A Survey of Carbon Nanotube Interconnects for Energy Efficient Integrated Circuits
A. Todri-Sanial et al.
IEEE Circuits and Systems Magazine 17(2), 47-62, 2017.

[6] “Local thermometry of self-heated nanoscale devices
F. Menges et al.
In Proc. IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), pp. 15-8, 2016.

[7] “Ballistic transport and high thermopower in one-dimensional InAs nanowires
S. Karg et al.
In Proc. 46th European Solid-State Device Research Conference (ESSDERC), pp. 341-344, 2016.

[8] “Thermoelectric Power Factor Enhancement by Spin-Polarized Currents. A Nanowire Case Study
A.C. Niemann et al.
Advanced Electronic Materials 2(9), 2016.

[9] “Thermal radiative near field transport between vanadium dioxide and silicon oxide across the metal insulator transition
F. Menges et al.
Applied Physics Letters 108(17), 171904, 2016.

[10] “Temperature mapping of operating nanoscale devices by scanning probe thermometry
F. Menges et al.
Nature Communications 7(10874), 2016.

[11] “Nanoscale thermometry by scanning thermal microscopy
F. Menges et al.
Review of Scientific Instruments 87(7), 074902, 2016.

[12] “One-dimensional behavior and high thermoelectric power factor in thin indium arsenide nanowires
P. Mensch et al.
Appl. Phys. Lett. 106, 093101, 2015.

[13] “Length-Dependent Thermal Transport along Molecular Chains
T. Meier et al.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 113(6), 060801, 2014.

[14] “Full thermoelectric characterization of InAs nanowires using MEMS heater/sensors
S.F. Karg et al.
Nanotechnology 25(30), 305702, 2014.

[15] “Using the Seebeck coefficient to determine charge carrier concentration, mobility, and relaxation time in InAs nanowires
V. Schmidt et al.
Appl. Phys. Lett. 104, 012113, 2014.

[16] “Electrical and thermoelectrical properties of gated InAs nanowires
P. Mensch et al.
In Proc. of European Solid-State Device Research Conference (ESSDERC), pp. 252-255, 2013.

[17] “Measurement of Thermoelectric Properties of Single Semiconductor Nanowires
S. Karg et al.
Journal of Electronic Materials 42, 2409, 2013.

[18] “Heat dissipation and thermometry in nanosystems: When interfaces dominate
B. Gotsmann et al.
In Proc. 71st Annual Device Research Conference (DRC), pp. 231-232, 2013.

[19] “Quantitative Thermometry of Nanoscale Hot Spots
F. Menges et al.
Nano Letters 12(2), 596-601, 2012.

Projects and funding

EFINED logo
EFINED
Energy Filtering Non-Equilibrium Devices


CONNECT logo
CarbON Nanotube compositE InterconneCTs


MOLESCO logo
MOLESCO
Molecular-Scale Electronics

QUIET logo
QUIET
QUalifying and Implementing a user-centric designed and EfficienT electric vehicle


Nanoheat logo
Nanoheat: Multidomain Platform for Integrated More-than-Moore/Beyond CMOS Systems Characterisation & Diagnostics