Power Dissipation of WSe2 Field-Effect Transistors Probed by Low-Frequency Raman Thermometry

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2018 Jul 25;10(29):24892-24898. doi: 10.1021/acsami.8b04724. Epub 2018 Jul 11.

Abstract

The ongoing shrinkage in the size of two-dimensional (2D) electronic circuitry results in high power densities during device operation, which could cause a significant temperature rise within 2D channels. One challenge in Raman thermometry of 2D materials is that the commonly used high-frequency modes do not precisely represent the temperature rise in some 2D materials because of peak broadening and intensity weakening at elevated temperatures. In this work, we show that a low-frequency E2g2 shear mode can be used to accurately extract temperature and measure thermal boundary conductance (TBC) in back-gated tungsten diselenide (WSe2) field-effect transistors, whereas the high-frequency peaks (E2g1 and A1g) fail to provide reliable thermal information. Our calculations indicate that the broadening of high-frequency Raman-active modes is primarily driven by anharmonic decay into pairs of longitudinal acoustic phonons, resulting in a weak coupling with out-of-plane flexural acoustic phonons that are responsible for the heat transfer to the substrate. We found that the TBC at the interface of WSe2 and Si/SiO2 substrate is ∼16 MW/m2 K, depends on the number of WSe2 layers, and peaks for 3-4 layer stacks. Furthermore, the TBC to the substrate is the highest from the layers closest to it, with each additional layer adding thermal resistance. We conclude that the location where heat dissipated in a multilayer stack is as important to device reliability as the total TBC.

Keywords: 2D materials; Boltzmann transport; Raman thermometry; WSe2; power dissipation; thermal boundary conductance; thermal transport.