4 research outputs found
Chemically Engineered Graphene-Based 2D Organic Molecular Magnet
Carbon-based magnetic materials and structures of mesoscopic dimensions may offer unique opportunities for future nanomagnetoelectronic/spintronic devices. To achieve their potential, carbon nanosystems must have controllable magnetic properties. We demonstrate that nitrophenyl functionalized graphene can act as a room-temperature 2D magnet. We report a comprehensive study of low-temperature magnetotransport, vibrating sample magnetometry (VSM), and superconducting quantum interference (SQUID) measurements before and after radical functionalization. Following nitrophenyl (NP) functionalization, epitaxially grown graphene systems can become organic molecular magnets with ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic ordering that persists at temperatures above 400 K. The field-dependent, surface magnetoelectric properties were studied using scanning probe microscopy (SPM) techniques. The results indicate that the NP-functionalization orientation and degree of coverage directly affect the magnetic properties of the graphene surface. In addition, graphene-based organic magnetic nanostructures were found to demonstrate a pronounced magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE). The results were consistent across different characterization techniques and indicate room-temperature magnetic ordering along preferred graphene orientations in the NP-functionalized samples. Chemically isolated graphene nanoribbons (CINs) were observed along the preferred functionality directions. These results pave the way for future magnetoelectronic/spintronic applications based on promising concepts such as current-induced magnetization switching, magnetoelectricity, half-metallicity, and quantum tunneling of magnetization
Chemical Modification of Epitaxial Graphene: Spontaneous Grafting of Aryl Groups
Chemical Modification of Epitaxial Graphene: Spontaneous Grafting of Aryl Group
Planar Edge Schottky Barrier-Tunneling Transistors Using Epitaxial Graphene/SiC Junctions
A purely planar graphene/SiC field
effect transistor is presented
here. The horizontal current flow over one-dimensional tunneling barrier
between planar graphene contact and coplanar two-dimensional SiC channel
exhibits superior on/off ratio compared to conventional transistors
employing vertical electron transport. Multilayer epitaxial graphene
(MEG) grown on SiC(0001̅) was adopted as the transistor source
and drain. The channel is formed by the accumulation layer at the
interface of semi-insulating SiC and a surface silicate that forms
after high vacuum high temperature annealing. Electronic bands between
the graphene edge and SiC accumulation layer form a thin Schottky
barrier, which is dominated by tunneling at low temperatures. A thermionic
emission prevails over tunneling at high temperatures. We show that
neglecting tunneling effectively causes the temperature dependence
of the Schottky barrier height. The channel can support current densities
up to 35 A/m
Nonperturbative Chemical Modification of Graphene for Protein Micropatterning
Graphene’s extraordinary physical properties and its planar geometry make it an ideal candidate for a wide array of applications, many of which require controlled chemical modification and the spatial organization of molecules on its surface. In particular, the ability to functionalize and micropattern graphene with proteins is relevant to bioscience applications such as biomolecular sensors, single-cell sensors, and tissue engineering. We report a general strategy for the noncovalent chemical modification of epitaxial graphene for protein immobilization and micropatterning. We show that bifunctional molecule pyrenebutanoic acid-succinimidyl ester (PYR-NHS), composed of the hydrophobic pyrene and the reactive succinimide ester group, binds to graphene noncovalently but irreversibly. We investigate whether the chemical treatment perturbs the electronic band structure of graphene using X-ray photoemission (XPS) and Raman spectroscopy. Our results show that the sp2 hybridization remains intact and that the π band maintains its characteristic Lorentzian shape in the Raman spectra. The modified graphene surfaces, which bind specifically to amines in proteins, are micropatterned with arrays of fluorescently labeled proteins that are relevant to glucose sensors (glucose oxidase) and cell sensor and tissue engineering applications (laminin)
