2 research outputs found
Controlled Electrochemical Intercalation of Graphene/<i>h-</i>BN van der Waals Heterostructures
Electrochemical intercalation
is a powerful method for tuning the
electronic properties of layered solids. In this work, we report an
electrochemical strategy to controllably intercalate lithium ions
into a series of van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures built by sandwiching
graphene between hexagonal boron nitride (<i>h</i>-BN).
We demonstrate that encapsulating graphene with <i>h</i>-BN eliminates parasitic surface side reactions while simultaneously
creating a new heterointerface that permits intercalation between
the atomically thin layers. To monitor the electrochemical process,
we employ the Hall effect to precisely monitor the intercalation reaction.
We also simultaneously probe the spectroscopic and electrical transport
properties of the resulting intercalation compounds at different stages
of intercalation. We achieve the highest carrier density >5 Ă—
10<sup>13</sup> cm<sup>2</sup> with mobility >10<sup>3</sup> cm<sup>2</sup>/(V s) in the most heavily intercalated samples, where Shubnikov–de
Haas quantum oscillations are observed at low temperatures. These
results set the stage for further studies that employ intercalation
in modifying properties of vdW heterostructures
Ultrafast Graphene Light Emitters
Ultrafast
electrically driven nanoscale light sources are critical
components in nanophotonics. Compound semiconductor-based light sources
for the nanophotonic platforms have been extensively investigated
over the past decades. However, monolithic ultrafast light sources
with a small footprint remain a challenge. Here, we demonstrate electrically
driven ultrafast graphene light emitters that achieve light pulse
generation with up to 10 GHz bandwidth across a broad spectral range
from the visible to the near-infrared. The fast response results from
ultrafast charge-carrier dynamics in graphene and weak electron-acoustic
phonon-mediated coupling between the electronic and lattice degrees
of freedom. We also find that encapsulating graphene with hexagonal
boron nitride (hBN) layers strongly modifies the emission spectrum
by changing the local optical density of states, thus providing up
to 460% enhancement compared to the gray-body thermal radiation for
a broad peak centered at 720 nm. Furthermore, the hBN encapsulation
layers permit stable and bright visible thermal radiation with electronic
temperatures up to 2000 K under ambient conditions as well as efficient
ultrafast electronic cooling via near-field coupling to hybrid polaritonic
modes under electrical excitation. These high-speed graphene light
emitters provide a promising path for on-chip light sources for optical
communications and other optoelectronic applications