42 research outputs found
Electronic transport in locally gated graphene nanoconstrictions
We have developed the combination of an etching and deposition technique that
enables the fabrication of locally gated graphene nanostructures of arbitrary
design. Employing this method, we have fabricated graphene nanoconstrictions
with local tunable transmission and characterized their electronic properties.
An order of magnitude enhanced gate efficiency is achieved adopting the local
gate geometry with thin dielectric gate oxide. A complete turn off of the
device is demonstrated as a function of the local gate voltage. Such strong
suppression of device conductance was found to be due to both quantum
confinement and Coulomb blockade effects in the constricted graphene
nanostructures.Comment: 3 pages 3 figures; separated and expanded from arXiv:0705.3044v
Dependence of quantum-Hall conductance on the edge-state equilibration position in a bipolar graphene sheet
By using four-terminal configurations, we investigated the dependence of
longitudinal and diagonal resistances of a graphene p-n interface on the
quantum-Hall edge-state equilibration position. The resistance of a p-n device
in our four-terminal scheme is asymmetric with respect to the zero point where
the filling factor () of the entire graphene vanishes. This resistance
asymmetry is caused by the chiral-direction-dependent change of the
equilibration position and leads to a deeper insight into the equilibration
process of the quantum-Hall edge states in a bipolar graphene system.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, will be published in PR
Energy Band Gap Engineering of Graphene Nanoribbons
We investigate electronic transport in lithographically patterned graphene
ribbon structures where the lateral confinement of charge carriers creates an
energy gap near the charge neutrality point. Individual graphene layers are
contacted with metal electrodes and patterned into ribbons of varying widths
and different crystallographic orientations. The temperature dependent
conductance measurements show larger energy gaps opening for narrower ribbons.
The sizes of these energy gaps are investigated by measuring the conductance in
the non-linear response regime at low temperatures. We find that the energy gap
scales inversely with the ribbon width, thus demonstrating the ability to
engineer the band gap of graphene nanostructures by lithographic processes.Comment: 7 pages including 4 figure
Electronic transport and quantum Hall effect in bipolar graphene p-n-p junction
We have developed a device fabrication process to pattern graphene into
nanostructures of arbitrary shape and control their electronic properties using
local electrostatic gates. Electronic transport measurements have been used to
characterize locally gated bipolar graphene -- junctions. We observe a
series of fractional quantum Hall conductance plateaus at high magnetic fields
as the local charge density is varied in the and regions. These
fractional plateaus, originating from chiral edge states equilibration at the
- interfaces, exhibit sensitivity to inter-edge backscattering which is
found to be strong for some of the plateuas and much weaker for other plateaus.
We use this effect to explore the role of backscattering and estimate disorder
strength in our graphene devices.Comment: 4 pages 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. Original version
arXiv:0705.3044v1 was separated and expanded to this current version and
arXiv:0709.173
Symmetry breaking and friction in few layer phosphorene
National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowshi
Graphene for Controlled and Accelerated Osteogenic Differentiation of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Modern tissue engineering strategies combine living cells and scaffold
materials to develop biological substitutes that can restore tissue functions.
Both natural and synthetic materials have been fabricated for transplantation
of stem cells and their specific differentiation into muscles, bones and
cartilages. One of the key objectives for bone regeneration therapy to be
successful is to direct stem cells' proliferation and to accelerate their
differentiation in a controlled manner through the use of growth factors and
osteogenic inducers. Here we show that graphene provides a promising
biocompatible scaffold that does not hamper the proliferation of human
mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) and accelerates their specific differentiation
into bone cells. The differentiation rate is comparable to the one achieved
with common growth factors, demonstrating graphene's potential for stem cell
research.Comment: 34 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, submitte
Transport properties of graphene with one-dimensional charge defects
We study the effect of extended charge defects in electronic transport
properties of graphene. Extended defects are ubiquitous in chemically and
epitaxially grown graphene samples due to internal strains associated with the
lattice mismatch. We show that at low energies these defects interact quite
strongly with the 2D Dirac fermions and have an important effect in the
DC-conductivity of these materials.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. published version: one figure, appendix and
references adde
Large Frequency Change with Thickness in Interlayer Breathing Mode - Significant Interlayer Interactions in Few Layer Black Phosphorus
Bulk black phosphorus (BP) consists of puckered layers of phosphorus atoms.
Few-layer BP, obtained from bulk BP by exfoliation, is an emerging candidate as
a channel material in post-silicon electronics. A deep understanding of its
physical properties and its full range of applications are still being
uncovered. In this paper, we present a theoretical and experimental
investigation of phonon properties in few-layer BP, focusing on the
low-frequency regime corresponding to interlayer vibrational modes. We show
that the interlayer breathing mode A3g shows a large redshift with increasing
thickness; the experimental and theoretical results agreeing well. This
thickness dependence is two times larger than that in the chalcogenide
materials such as few-layer MoS2 and WSe2, because of the significantly larger
interlayer force constant and smaller atomic mass in BP. The derived interlayer
out-of-plane force constant is about 50% larger than that in graphene and MoS2.
We show that this large interlayer force constant arises from the sizable
covalent interaction between phosphorus atoms in adjacent layers, and that
interlayer interactions are not merely of the weak van der Waals type. These
significant interlayer interactions are consistent with the known surface
reactivity of BP, and have been shown to be important for electric-field
induced formation of Dirac cones in thin film BP.Comment: Nano Letters, 201