Convergent thermal conductivity in strained monolayer graphene

PHYSICAL REVIEW B(2024)

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Abstract
The strain dependence of thermal conductivity (kappa) in monolayer graphene, with reports of enhancement, suppression, or even divergence, has been highly controversial. To address this open question, we have systematically investigated the effects of tensile strain on the kappa of graphene using the exact solution of the Peierls-Boltzmann transport equation based on the first-principles interatomic force constants combined with machine learning assisted molecular dynamics simulations. In contrast to previous studies, we find that the kappa in the strained graphene is convergent after considering four-phonon scattering, which is dominant for the long-wavelength flexural phonons because of its much weaker frequency dependence (tau(-1)(4)proportional to omega(beta) with beta < 2) compared to the three-phonon scattering case (tau(-1)(3)proportional to omega(beta) with beta > 2). Furthermore, kappa exhibits nonmonotonic variations with increasing strain up to 8% due to the competition between phonon lifetime, group velocity, and heat capacity of acoustic phonons. Our results deepen the fundamental understanding of thermal transport in strained graphene and offer insights for tuning the thermal properties of two-dimensional materials through strain engineering
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