21 research outputs found

    CHARGE TRANSPORT IN GRAPHENE WITH ADATOM OVER-LAYERS ; CHARGED IMPURITY SCATTERING, DIELECTRIC SCREENING, AND LOCALIZATION.

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    Graphene, a single atom thick plane of graphite, is a novel two-dimensional electron system in which the low-energy electrons behave as massless chiral Dirac fermions. This thesis explores the effects of disorder in graphene through controlled surface modification in ultra-high vacuum (UHV), coupled with in situ electronic transport experiments. Three different roles of adatom overlayers on graphene are investigated. First, the effects of charged impurity scattering are studied by introducing potassium ions on the graphene at low temperature in UHV. The theoretically expected magnitude and linear density-dependence of the conductivity due to long range Coulomb scattering is verified. Second, the effective dielectric constant of graphene is modified by adding ice overlayers at low temperature in UHV. The opposing effects of screening on scattering by long range (charged impurity) and short range impurities are observed as variations in conductivity, and the changes are in agreement with Boltzmann theory for graphene transport within the random phase approximation. The minimum conductivity of graphene is roughly independent of charged impurity density and dielectric constant, in agreement with the self-consistent theory of screened carrier density inhomogeneity (electron and hole puddles). Taken together, the experimental results on charged impurity scattering and dielectric screening strongly support that long range Coulomb scattering is the dominant scattering mechanism in as-fabricated graphene on SiO2. In addition to the semi-classical transport properties, quantum transport is also studied with cobalt decorated graphene. Strong localization is achieved in the disordered graphene through deposition of cobalt nanoclusters. In finite magnetic field a phase transition occurs from the localized state to the quantum Hall state. Scaling analysis confirms that the transition is a quantum phase transition which is similar to the localization - delocalization transitions in other two dimensional electron systems

    High-fidelity conformation of graphene to SiO2 topographic features

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    Strain engineering of graphene through interaction with a patterned substrate offers the possibility of tailoring its electronic properties, but will require detailed understanding of how graphene's morphology is determined by the underlying substrate. However, previous experimental reports have drawn conflicting conclusions about the structure of graphene on SiO2. Here we show that high-resolution non-contact atomic force microscopy of SiO2 reveals roughness at the few-nm length scale unresolved in previous measurements, and scanning tunneling microscopy of graphene on SiO2 shows it to be slightly smoother than the supporting SiO2 substrate. Quantitative analysis of the competition between bending rigidity of the graphene and adhesion to the substrate explains the observed roughness of monolayer graphene on SiO2 as extrinsic, and provides a natural, intuitive description in terms of highly conformal adhesion. The analysis indicates that graphene adopts the conformation of the underlying substrate down to the smallest features with nearly 99% fidelity.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures plus supplemental informatio

    Intrinsic and Extrinsic Performance Limits of Graphene Devices on SiO2

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    The linear dispersion relation in graphene[1,2] gives rise to a surprising prediction: the resistivity due to isotropic scatterers (e.g. white-noise disorder[3] or phonons[4-8]) is independent of carrier density n. Here we show that acoustic phonon scattering[4-6] is indeed independent of n, and places an intrinsic limit on the resistivity in graphene of only 30 Ohm at room temperature (RT). At a technologically-relevant carrier density of 10^12 cm^-2, the mean free path for electron-acoustic phonon scattering is >2 microns, and the intrinsic mobility limit is 2x10^5 cm^2/Vs, exceeding the highest known inorganic semiconductor (InSb, ~7.7x10^4 cm^2/Vs[9]) and semiconducting carbon nanotubes (~1x10^5 cm^2/Vs[10]). We also show that extrinsic scattering by surface phonons of the SiO2 substrate[11,12] adds a strong temperature dependent resistivity above ~200 K[8], limiting the RT mobility to ~4x10^4 cm^2/Vs, pointing out the importance of substrate choice for graphene devices[13].Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure

    Intrinsic And Extrinsic Performance Limits Of Graphene Devices On Sio 2

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    The linear dispersion relation in graphene gives rise to a surprising prediction: the resistivity due to isotropic scatterers, such as white-noise disorder or phonons, is independent of carrier density, n. Here we show that electron-acoustic phonon scattering is indeed independent of n, and contributes only 30 Ω to graphene\u27s room-temperature resistivity. At a technologically relevant carrier density of 1 × 1012 cm-2, we infer a mean free path for electron-acoustic phonon scattering of \u3e2 μm and an intrinsic mobility limit of 2 × 105 cm2 V-1 s-1. If realized, this mobility would exceed that of InSb, the inorganic semiconductor with the highest known mobility (∼7.7 × 104 cm2 V-1 s-1; ref. 9) and that of semiconducting carbon nanotubes (∼1 × 105 cm2 V-1 s-1; ref. 10). A strongly temperature-dependent resistivity contribution is observed above ∼200 K (ref. 8); its magnitude, temperature dependence and carrier-density dependence are consistent with extrinsic scattering by surface phonons at the SiO2 substrate and limit the room-temperature mobility to ∼4 × 104 cm2 V-1 s-1, indicating the importance of substrate choice for graphene devices. © 2008 Nature Publishing Group

    Scattering Mechanisms In Graphene

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    Graphene is an exciting new condensed matter system, both for the opportunity to observe the physics associated with massless Dirac Fermions in the laboratory, and because of materials parameters which make it attractive for technological applications such as high-frequency transistors and conducting, transparent films. However, only very recently has there emerged a coherent understanding of the processes which govern the charge carrier mobilityand conductivity in graphene. I will discuss experiments performed on atomically-clean[l] graphene on SiO2 in ultra-high vacuum to determine the charge carrier scattering rates from charged impurities[2], lattice defects[ 3], and phonons (graphene acoustic phonons and substrate polar optical phonons)[4], as well as their dependence on dielectric environment[5]. The experiments point out both the promise of the material as well as the technological challenges that lie ahead in realizing better graphene samples. © 2009 IEEE
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