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Supplementary material Simultaneous measurement of intrinsic electrical and thermal conductivities of suspended monolayer graphene Haidong Wang1, Kosaku Kurata1, Takanobu Fukunaga1, Hiroki Ago2, Hiroshi Takamatsu*1, Xing Zhang*3, Tatsuya Ikuta4, Koji Takahashi4, Takashi Nishiyama4, Yasuyuki Takata5 1Department 2Institute for Materials Chemistry and Engineering, Kyushu University 3Department 4Department 5International of Mechanical Engineering, Kyushu University of Engineering Mechanics, Tsinghua University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Kyushu University Institute for Carbon-Neutral Energy Research, Kyushu University *Corresponding Author, E-mail: [email protected], Fax: +81 92-802-3123 *Corresponding Author, E-mail: [email protected], Fax: +86 10-62781610 1. Brief introduction to the sample fabrication process In order to perform electrothermal measurement for graphene, a wet etching method using buffered hydrofluoric acid is normally used for suspending graphene sample. However, it is difficult to suspend the graphene membrane with a width of several micrometers because the etched distance between the graphene and substrate is limited to only hundreds of nanometers. In order to fabricate micrometer-sized suspended graphene samples, we developed a new fabrication method as following. 1 Fig. S1 Flow-chart of the fabrication process of graphene sample. Figure S1 shows the flow-chart of the fabrication process: (1) the monolayer graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition method was transferred onto a SiO2/Si substrate; (2) 300 nm thick EB-resist was spin-coated on the surface of graphene and patterned into micrometer wide ribbons; (3) the graphene was cut into ribbons by O2 plasma etching; (4) another EB-resist layer was patterned into a desired shape for making metallic electrode pads and micro-beam sensor; (5) a metallic thin film of 10nm Cr and 100nm Au was deposited by using a physical vapor deposition method. The electrode pads and sensor were created after a lift-off process; (6) a protection layer for graphene was made from the patterned EB-resist layer; (7) the SiO2 not covered by 2 EB-resist was removed by reactive ions etching; (8) the Si substrate exposed to XeF2 gas was etched isotropically in depth and the whole graphene device was suspended; (9) the EB-resist and SiO2 were removed separately. Then, the suspended graphene device was dried using a super-critical point dryer. 2. Polymeric residues on the electrode pads (a) (b) Fig. S2 Comparison between the suspended graphene with and without polymeric residues. Figure S2 shows the SEM images of suspended graphene with and without polymeric residue layer. We found that the proper temperature and immersion time are important for removing the polymeric residues. If the temperature is too low or the immersion time is too short, some polymeric residues may be left on the graphene after drying, as shown in Fig. S2 (a). In contrast, Fig. S2 (b) shows a clean suspended graphene used for 3 measurement. Fig. S3 Random particles and polymeric residues on the electrode pad (the particles and polymeric residues are marked by the red and yellow arrows, respectively). Figure S3 shows the suspended graphene sample in the main text. Some impurity particles and polymer residues are found on the electrode pad. The impurity particles were randomly generated during the metal film deposition process. There are no such particles found on the suspended graphene sample. 4 Fig. S4 Zoom-in SEM image of the polymeric residues left on the electrode pad. Figure S4 shows the polymeric residues left on the electrode pad. In the upper figure, the yellow area was covered by EB-resist layer in order to protect the graphene during the reactive ion etching process. The green area was not covered by any polymer layer. In the figure below, the polymeric residue in line-shape was the edge of the protection layer, which became insoluble after ions bombardment. Fortunately, the rest of the polymer layer could be removed by dipping into warm ZDMAC solution. The insoluble polymeric residues are far from the target graphene ribbon and cause no influences to the sample quality. 5 It should be noted that to our knowledge, there is still no method that can completely remove all the polymeric residues on the graphene. Some nanoscale residues may be left on the suspended graphene beyond the SEM imaging. This is one important factor that suppresses the thermal conductivity of graphene. Comparing with the simple fabrication process of the suspended graphene for Raman measurement, the sample preparation for electrothermal measurement is much more complicated. Thus, there is a bigger chance to leave more residues on the graphene sample. This explains why the thermal conductivity of graphene measured by using micro-electronic device is usually smaller than that measured by Raman method. On the other hand, the Raman spectrum of our suspended graphene sample shows a good quality, same as the sample prepared for Raman measurement. Thus, our results are closer to the experimental data measured by the Raman method. 3. Lattice dynamics theory for predicting the thermal conductivity Based on a lattice dynamics theory, the thermal conductivity of monolayer graphene can be calculated using the next equation [1, 2]: 1 = 4 k BT 2 where kB, s TA,LA,ZA, TO,LO,ZO qmax qmin exp s (q) / k BT 2 s (q)vs (q) s (q) 2 exp s (q) / kBT 1 q dq , (1) , ωs, τs, q and T are the Boltzmann constant, reduced Planck constant, 6 phonon frequency, relaxation time, wave vector and temperature, respectively. δ = 0.35 nm is the interplanar spacing of graphite. vs = dωs /dq is the group velocity. The subscript s stands for six different phonon polarization branches, including three acoustic branches (TA, LA, ZA) and three optical branches (TO, LO, ZO). A full phonon dispersion relation for all six phonon branches is used to calculate the thermal conductivity of graphene. The relaxation time τs is given as: 1 1 1 s (q) , U , s (q) B , s (q) (2) where τU,s and τB,s are the relaxation times of phonon Umklapp scattering and boundary scattering, given as: U , s (q) 1 M vs2 s ,max , s2 kBT s2 (q) (3) d 1 p , vs (q ) 1 p (4) B ,s (q) where γs, vs and M are the Gruneisen parameter, average phonon velocity and mass of a graphene unit cell, respectively. ωs,max = ωs (qmax) is the maximum cut-off frequency. d is the width of SLG ribbon. p is a specularity parameter describing the roughness at the edges. γLA and γTA are chosen to be 1.80 and 0.75, respectively, as recommended in the literature [1]. 7 As discussed in the main text, the phonons of in-plane LA and TA modes are important energy carriers in graphene. Several parameters, such as width, specularity parameter and cut-off frequencies of phonons, play important roles in deciding the final thermal conductivity of graphene. We found that the minimum cut-off frequency ωs,min is particularly different for the monolayer graphene. If the graphene is supported by substrate or has interactions with neighboring layers, more long wave-length phonons will be restricted and ωs,min will be increased accordingly. In an ideal case without any outside influences, ωs,min tends to zero. However, the defects and residues are unavoidable for the prepared suspended monolayer graphene. Therefore, the minimum cut-off frequency is larger than zero, but still much less than the bulk value. This is one of the important reasons that the monolayer graphene has much higher thermal conductivity than graphite and multilayer graphene. References [1] Nika, D. L. and Balandin, A. A. Two-dimensional phonon transport in graphene. J. Phys.: Condens. Matt. 24, 233203 (2012). [2] Nika, D. L., Pokatilov, E. P., Askerov, A. S. and Balandin, A. A. Phonon thermal conduction in graphene: role of Umklapp and edge roughness scattering. Phys. Rev. B 79, 155413 (2009). 8