TY - JOUR AU - Qiye Zheng AU - Divya Chalise AU - Mingxin Jia AU - Yuqiang Zeng AU - Minxiang Zeng AU - Mortaza Saeidi-Javash AU - Ali N.M Tanvir AU - Gottlieb Uahengo AU - Sumanjeet Kaur AU - Javier E Garay AU - Tengfei Luo AU - Yanliang Zhang AU - Ravi S Prasher AU - Christopher Dames AB -
The recent push for the “materials by design” paradigm requires synergistic integration of scalable computation, synthesis, and characterization. Among these, techniques for efficient measurement of thermal transport can be a bottleneck limiting the experimental database size, especially for diverse materials with a range of roughness, porosity, and anisotropy. Traditional contact thermal measurements have challenges with throughput and the lack of spatially resolvable property mapping, while non-contact pump-probe laser methods generally need mirror smooth sample surfaces and also require serial raster scanning to achieve property mapping. Here, we present structured illumination with thermal imaging (SI-TI), a new thermal characterization tool based on parallelized all-optical heating and thermometry. Experiments on representative dense and porous bulk materials as well as a 3D printed thermoelectric thick film (∼50 μm) demonstrate that SI-TI (1) enables paralleled measurement of multiple regions and samples without raster scanning; (2) can dynamically adjust the heating pattern purely in software, to optimize the measurement sensitivity in different directions for anisotropic materials; and (3) can tolerate rough (∼3 μm) and scratched sample surfaces. This work highlights a new avenue in adaptivity and throughput for thermal characterization of diverse materials.
BT - Applied Physics Reviews DA - 06/2022 DO - 10.1063/5.0079842 IS - 2 LA - eng N2 -
The recent push for the “materials by design” paradigm requires synergistic integration of scalable computation, synthesis, and characterization. Among these, techniques for efficient measurement of thermal transport can be a bottleneck limiting the experimental database size, especially for diverse materials with a range of roughness, porosity, and anisotropy. Traditional contact thermal measurements have challenges with throughput and the lack of spatially resolvable property mapping, while non-contact pump-probe laser methods generally need mirror smooth sample surfaces and also require serial raster scanning to achieve property mapping. Here, we present structured illumination with thermal imaging (SI-TI), a new thermal characterization tool based on parallelized all-optical heating and thermometry. Experiments on representative dense and porous bulk materials as well as a 3D printed thermoelectric thick film (∼50 μm) demonstrate that SI-TI (1) enables paralleled measurement of multiple regions and samples without raster scanning; (2) can dynamically adjust the heating pattern purely in software, to optimize the measurement sensitivity in different directions for anisotropic materials; and (3) can tolerate rough (∼3 μm) and scratched sample surfaces. This work highlights a new avenue in adaptivity and throughput for thermal characterization of diverse materials.
PY - 2022 EP - 021411 ST - Applied Physics Reviews T2 - Applied Physics Reviews TI - Structured illumination with thermal imaging (SI-TI): A dynamically reconfigurable metrology for parallelized thermal transport characterization UR - https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0079842 VL - 9 ER -