Thermal and electromechanical characterization of top-down fabricated p-type silicon nanowiresInvited talk at the 7th International Workshop on Advanced Materials Science and Nanotechnology IWAMSN2014, 2–6 November, 2014, Ha Long, Vietnam

ADVANCES IN NATURAL SCIENCES-NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY(2015)

Cited 15|Views7
No score
Abstract
In this paper we report thermal conductivity and piezoresistivity measurements of top-down fabricated highly boron doped (N-A = 1.5 x 10(19) cm(-3)) suspended Si nanowires. These measurements were performed in a cryogenic probe station respectively by using the 3 omega method and by in situ application of a longitudinal tensile stress to the nanowire under test with a direct four point bending of the Si nanowire die. Nanowires investigated have a thickness of 160 nm, a width in the 80-260 nm range and a length in the 2.5-5.2 mu m range. We found that for these geometries, thermal conduction still obeys Fourier's law and that, as expected, the thermal conductivity is largely reduced when the nanowires width is shrunk, but, to a lower extent than published values for nanowires grown by vapor-liquid-solid (VLS) processes. While a large giant piezoresistance effect was evidenced by various authors when a static stress is applied, we only observed a limited nanowire size dependence of the piezoresistivity in our experiments where a dynamical mechanical loading is applied. This confirms that the giant piezoresistance effect in unbiased Si nanowires is not an intrinsic bulk effect but is dominated by surface related effects in agreement with the piezopinch effect model.
More
Translated text
Key words
silicon nanowires,piezoresistivity,thermal conductivity,four point bending,three omega method
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined