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Vivek Goyal

Researcher at University of California, Riverside

Publications -  14
Citations -  1822

Vivek Goyal is an academic researcher from University of California, Riverside. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thermal conductivity & Graphene. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 14 publications receiving 1650 citations.

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Exfoliation and characterization of bismuth telluride atomic quintuples and quasi-two-dimensional crystals.

TL;DR: A method for "graphene-inspired" exfoliation of crystalline bismuth telluride films with a thickness of a few atoms is described, paving the way for producing stacks of crystallines bism Ruth Telluride quantum wells with the strong spatial confinement of charge carriers and acoustic phonons, beneficial for thermoelectric devices.
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Thermal properties of the hybrid graphene-metal nano-micro-composites: Applications in thermal interface materials

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on synthesis and thermal properties of the electrically conductive thermal interface materials with the hybrid graphene-metal particle fillers and show that the thermal conductivity of resulting composites was increased by ∼500% in a temperature range from 300 to 400 k at a small graphene loading fraction of 5-vol.-%.
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Micro-Raman Spectroscopy of Mechanically Exfoliated Few-Quintuple Layers of Bi(2)Te(3), Bi(2)Se(3) and Sb(2)Te(3) Materials

TL;DR: In this article, the micro-Raman spectroscopy study of the "graphene-like" exfoliated few-quintuple layers of Bi(2)Te(3), Bi(1)Se(3) and Sb( 2)Te (3) was carried out on mica, sapphire and hafnium-oxide substrates.
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Graphene-on-Diamond Devices with Enhanced Current-Carrying Capacity: Carbon sp2-on-sp3 Technology

TL;DR: Graphene's current-induced breakdown is thermally activated and the current carrying capacity of graphene can be improved not only on the single-crystal diamond substrates but also on an inexpensive ultrananocrystalline diamond, which can be produced in a process compatible with a conventional Si technology.
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Graphene-on-diamond devices with increased current-carrying capacity: carbon sp2-on-sp3 technology.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that by replacing SiO(2) with synthetic diamond, one can substantially increase the current-carrying capacity of graphene to as high as 18 μA/nm(2), even at ambient conditions.