Directly Measuring How Surface Defects Affect Phonon Propagation

5 November 2025

For the first time, researchers have directly measured how much “lifetime shortening” acoustic phonons (the primary carriers of heat) experience from surface defects. This process is a key bottleneck for thermal management in modern microelectronics, but it has been “extremely challenging to measure” until now [1].

Using a highly sensitive Helium Spin Echo (HeSE) spectrometer, the team studied a nickel (Ni(111)) surface. They precisely controlled the number of surface defects using argon sputtering to create them and annealing to remove them.

They found:

  • Phonon lifetimes decreased (and linewidths broadened) linearly as the surface defect density increased.
  • This defect-induced scattering adds a temperature-independent component to the phonon’s decay, meaning the defects contribute a fixed amount of scattering regardless of the temperature.

This work provides the first quantitative estimate for this fundamental scattering rate , which is critical for engineering the thermal properties of future electronics, especially 2D materials.

[1] PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 132, 056202 (2024).

This article was posted in:

Publication

Creative Commons License.
The text in this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Images, including our videos, are Copyright ©University of Cambridge and licensors/contributors as identified. All rights reserved. We make our image and video content available in a number of ways – on our main website under its Terms and conditions, and on a range of channels including social media that permit your use and sharing of our content under their respective Terms.