58 research outputs found
Effect of oxygen plasma etching on graphene studied with Raman spectroscopy and electronic transport
We report a study of graphene and graphene field effect devices after
exposure to a series of short pulses of oxygen plasma. We present data from
Raman spectroscopy, back-gated field-effect and magneto-transport measurements.
The intensity ratio between Raman "D" and "G" peaks, I(D)/I(G) (commonly used
to characterize disorder in graphene) is observed to increase approximately
linearly with the number (N(e)) of plasma etching pulses initially, but then
decreases at higher Ne. We also discuss implications of our data for extracting
graphene crystalline domain sizes from I(D)/I(G). At the highest Ne measured,
the "2D" peak is found to be nearly suppressed while the "D" peak is still
prominent. Electronic transport measurements in plasma-etched graphene show an
up-shifting of the Dirac point, indicating hole doping. We also characterize
mobility, quantum Hall states, weak localization and various scattering lengths
in a moderately etched sample. Our findings are valuable for understanding the
effects of plasma etching on graphene and the physics of disordered graphene
through artificially generated defects.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Nanosecond spin lifetimes in single- and few-layer graphene-hBN heterostructures at room temperature
We present a new fabrication method of graphene spin-valve devices which
yields enhanced spin and charge transport properties by improving both the
electrode-to-graphene and graphene-to-substrate interface. First, we prepare
Co/MgO spin injection electrodes onto Si/SiO. Thereafter, we
mechanically transfer a graphene-hBN heterostructure onto the prepatterned
electrodes. We show that room temperature spin transport in single-, bi- and
trilayer graphene devices exhibit nanosecond spin lifetimes with spin diffusion
lengths reaching 10m combined with carrier mobilities exceeding 20,000
cm/Vs.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Probing the Nature of Defects in Graphene by Raman Spectroscopy
Raman Spectroscopy is able to probe disorder in graphene through
defect-activated peaks. It is of great interest to link these features to the
nature of disorder. Here we present a detailed analysis of the Raman spectra of
graphene containing different type of defects. We found that the intensity
ratio of the D and D' peak is maximum (~ 13) for sp3-defects, it decreases for
vacancy-like defects (~ 7) and reaches a minimum for boundaries in graphite
(~3.5).Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
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