Abstract

Graphene is a material with remarkable electronic properties and exceptional thermal transport properties near room temperature, which have been well examined and understood. However at very low temperatures the thermodynamic and thermal transport properties are much less well explored and somewhat surprisingly, is expected to exhibit extreme thermal isolation. Here we demonstrate an ultra-sensitive, wide-bandwidth measurement scheme to probe the thermal transport and thermodynamic properties of the electron gas of graphene. We employ Johnson noise thermometry at microwave frequency to sensitively measure the temperature of the electron gas with resolution of $4 mK/\sqrt{Hz}$ and a bandwidth of 80 MHz. We have measured the electron-phonon coupling from 2-30 K at a charge density of $2\cdot 10^{11} cm^{-2}$. Utilizing bolometric mixing, we have sensed temperature oscillations with period of 430 ps and have determined the heat capacity of the electron gas to be $2\cdot 10^{-21} J/(K\cdot \mu m^2)$ at 5 K which is consistent with that of a two dimensional, Dirac electron gas. These measurements suggest that graphene-based devices together with wide bandwidth noise thermometry can generate substantial advances in the areas of ultra-sensitive bolometry, calorimetry, microwave and terahertz photo-detection, and bolometric mixing for applications in areas such as observational astronomy and quantum information and measurement.

Highlights

  • Graphene is a material with remarkable electronic properties [1] and exceptional thermal-transport properties near room temperature, which have been well examined and understood [2]

  • We make our measurements at the charge-neutrality point (CNP) where the electron density is a result of a large disorder potential that is typical with SiO2 substrates [23]

  • Our sample is deep in the diffusive limit, i.e., kple

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Graphene is a material with remarkable electronic properties [1] and exceptional thermal-transport properties near room temperature, which have been well examined and understood [2]. Scheme based upon high-frequency Johnson noise, which provides both wide bandwidth and sensitivity to resolve the fundamental thermal fluctuations, with minimal disturbance to the thermal properties of the sample. This technique should be useful for both thermodynamic studies of graphene [16,17,18,19] and for bolometric applications at very low temperatures. These estimates suggest a number of exciting possibilities: detection of single microwave-frequency photons, photon number resolution, and spectroscopy of terrahertz photons [9,20,21,22]

THERMAL MODEL
NOISE THERMOMETRY AND SAMPLE FABRICATION
MEASUREMENTS
DISCUSSION
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