Thermal Conductivity above 2000 W/m.K in Boron Arsenide by Nanosecond Transducer-less Time-Domain Thermoreflectance
Abstract
Cubic boron arsenide (c-BAs) has been theoretically predicted to exhibit thermal conductivity appa comparable to that of diamond, yet experimental measurements have plateaued at ~1300W/mK. We report room-temperature appa exceeding 2000W/mK in c-BAs, on par with single-crystal diamond. This finding is enabled by high-quality single crystals and a newly developed nanosecond, transducer-less time-domain thermoreflectance technique that allows spatial mapping of appa without metal transducers. Thermal conductivity correlates with crystal quality, as evidenced by stronger photoluminescence and longer photoluminescence lifetimes. However, the observed nanosecond lifetimes remain shorter than expected for an indirect bandgap semiconductor, suggesting room for further crystal quality improvement and higher appa. These results challenge current theoretical models and highlight c-BAs as a promising material for next-generation electronics.
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