High thermal conductivity is an important parameter for nitride-based power electronic and deep-UV light emitters. Especially in the latter case short period superlattices and multicomponent alloys are used and the knowledge of the thermal properties of the binary compounds is sufficient. In-plane and cross-plane thermal conductivity of AlGaN/GaN superlattices were measured by differential two-wire 3ω method in the temperature range from 147 to 325 K. Samples were grown by metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy; the structure quality and accuracy of superlattice structures preparation were verified by means of HRXRD and transmission electron microscopy. It was observed, that value of thermal conductivities decrease with decreasing period thickness, while temperature dependencies differ from each other—in-plane thermal conductivity decreases, and cross-plane—increases with increasing temperature. Callaway method was used for thermal conductivity calculation; dependence of boundary scattering rate on the phonon wavelength was taken into account. Minimum thermal conductivity was added to calculated values to include the influence of high frequency acoustic phonons and optical phonons on the heat transport. Calculations are in good agreement with experimental results.
Temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility of polycrystalline oxygen samples has been measured in the range from 1 to 54 K. The measurements were performed using our home-designed SQUID-based gradiometer. The sensitivity of the instrument with respect to susceptibility reaches values of the order of 10 13 -. The results obtained are compared with earlier literature data.
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