Hot-Carrier Seebeck Effect: Diffusion and Remote Detection of Hot Carriers in Graphene

Nano Lett. 2015 Jun 10;15(6):4000-5. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b00922. Epub 2015 May 12.

Abstract

We investigate hot carrier propagation across graphene using an electrical nonlocal injection/detection method. The device consists of a monolayer graphene flake contacted by multiple metal leads. Using two remote leads for electrical heating, we generate a carrier temperature gradient that results in a measurable thermoelectric voltage V(NL) across the remaining (detector) leads. Due to the nonlocal character of the measurement, V(NL) is exclusively due to the Seebeck effect. Remarkably, a departure from the ordinary relationship between Joule power P and V(NL), V(NL) ∼ P, becomes readily apparent at low temperatures, representing a fingerprint of hot-carrier dominated thermoelectricity. By studying V(NL) as a function of bias, we directly determine the carrier temperature and the characteristic cooling length for hot-carrier propagation, which are key parameters for a variety of new applications that rely on hot-carrier transport.

Keywords: Graphene; Seebeck effect; electron−phonon interaction; hot carriers; supercollisions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't