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Electron-phonon cooling in large monolayer graphene devices

We present thermal measurements of large area (over $1,000$~$μ$m$^2$) monolayer graphene samples at cryogenic temperatures to study the electron-phonon thermal conductivity of graphene. By using two large samples with areas which differ by a factor of 10, we are able to clearly show the area dependence of the electron-phonon cooling. We find that, at temperatures far below the Bloch-Gruneisen temperature $T_\mathrm{BG}$, the electron-phonon cooling power is accurately described by the $T^4$ temperature dependence predicted for clean samples. Using this model, we are able to extract a value for the electron-phonon coupling constant as a function of gate voltage, and the graphene electron-lattice deformation potential. We also present results for thermal conductance at higher temperatures, above $T_\mathrm{BG}/4$, for which the clean limit no longer applies. In this regime we find a cooling power which is accurately described qualitatively, but not quantitatively, by a model which predicts the emission of very high energy phonons through a disorder-assisted mechanism.

preprint2015arXivOpen access
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