JOURNAL ARTICLE

Heat dissipation in few-layer MoS 2 and MoS 2 /hBN heterostructure

Abstract

Abstract State-of-the-art fabrication and characterisation techniques have been employed to measure the thermal conductivity of suspended, single-crystalline MoS 2 and MoS 2 /hBN heterostructures. Two-laser Raman scattering thermometry was used combined with real time measurements of the absorbed laser power. Measurements on MoS 2 layers with thicknesses of 5 and 14 nm exhibit thermal conductivity in the range between 12 Wm −1 K −1 and 24 Wm −1 K −1 . Additionally, after determining the thermal conductivity of the latter MoS 2 sample, an hBN flake was transferred onto it and the effective thermal conductivity of the heterostructure was subsequently measured. Remarkably, despite that the thickness of the hBN layer was less than a hal of the thickness of the MoS 2 layer, the heterostructure showed an almost eight-fold increase in the thermal conductivity, being able to dissipate more than ten times the laser power without any visible sign of damage. These results are consistent with a high thermal interface conductance G between MoS 2 and hBN and an efficient in-plane heat spreading driven by hBN. Indeed, we estimate G ∼ 70 MW m −2 K −1 for hBN layer thermal conductivity of 450 Wm −1 K −1 which is significantly higher than previously reported values. Our work therefore demonstrates that the insertion of hBN layers in potential MoS 2 -based devices holds the promise for efficient thermal management.

Keywords:
Thermal conductivity Materials science Heterojunction Laser Raman spectroscopy Optoelectronics Thermal Layer (electronics) Fabrication Optics Composite material Thermodynamics

Metrics

14
Cited By
0.67
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
34
Refs
0.63
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Thermal properties of materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
2D Materials and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Graphene research and applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.