491 research outputs found
Selective epitaxial growth of graphene on SiC
We present an innovative method of selective epitaxial growth of few layers
graphene (FLG) on a pre-patterned SiC substrate. The methods involves,
successively, the sputtering of a thin AlN layer on top of a mono-crystalline
SiC substrate and, then, patterning it with e-beam lithography (EBL) and wet
etching. The sublimation of few atomic layers of Si from the SiC substrate
occurs only through the selectively etched AlN layer. The presence of the Raman
G-band at ~1582 cm-1 in the AlN-free areas is used to validate the concept, it
gives absolute evidence of the selective FLG growth.Comment: comments: 3 pages, reference 3 replace
Growth of monolayer graphene on 8deg off-axis 4H-SiC (000-1) substrates with application to quantum transport devices
Using high temperature annealing conditions with a graphite cap covering the
C-face of an 8deg off-axis 4H-SiC sample, large and homogeneous single
epitaxial graphene layers have been grown. Raman spectroscopy shows evidence of
the almost free-standing character of these monolayer graphene sheets, which
was confirmed by magneto-transport measurements. We find a moderate p-type
doping, high carrier mobility and half integer Quantum Hall effect typical of
high quality graphene samples. This opens the way to a fully compatible
integration of graphene with SiC devices on the wafers that constitute the
standard in today's SiC industry.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures , Submitted in AP
Method for analysis of heavy sulphur compounds using gas chromatography with flame photometric detection
A method for analysis of heavy sulphur compounds in wines, based on gas chromatography (GC) with flame photometric detection, is
reported. Wine samples preparation includes a dichloromethane liquid–liquid extraction followed by concentration under a nitrogen atmosphere.
The extracted fraction was also analysed by GC–mass spectrometry. The method enables high recovery of sulphur compounds in wine
and satisfies the requirements of repeatability and sensitivity. Applications of the method to red, white and Port wines are reported
Early stage formation of graphene on the C-face of 6H-SiC
An investigation of the early stage formation of graphene on the C-face of
6H-SiC is presented. We show that the sublimation of few atomic layers of Si
out of the SiC substrate is not homogeneous. In good agreement with the results
of theoretical calculations it starts from defective sites, mainly dislocations
that define nearly circular flakes, which have a pyramidal, volcano-like, shape
with a center chimney where the original defect was located. At higher
temperatures, complete conversion occurs but, again, it is not homogeneous.
Within the sample surface the intensity of the Raman G and 2D bands, evidences
non-homogeneous thickness.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Nonequilibrium Luminescence At The E0+Δ0 Gap In Gaas With Si-δ Doping
We studied the light scattering spectra of three molecular beam epitaxy GaAs samples with Si-δ doping. A broad feature appears in these spectra which is similar to that attributed by other authors to resonant Raman scattering by electronic intersubband transitions. By studying the dependence of this emission on exciting laser photon energy we believe that this line is really produced by nonequilibrium luminescence at the E0+Δ 0 gap.71115619562
Investigation of Long Monolayer Graphene Ribbons grown on Graphite Capped 6H-SiC (000-1)
We present an investigation of large, isolated, graphene ribbons grown on the
C-face of on-axis semi-insulating 6H-SiC wafers. Using a graphite cap to cover
the SiC sample, we modify the desorption of the Si species during the Si
sublimation process. This results in a better control of the growth kinetics,
yielding very long (about 300 microns long, 5 microns wide), homogeneous
monolayer graphene ribbons. These ribbons fully occupy unusually large terraces
on the step bunched SiC surface, as shown by AFM, optical microscopy and SEM.
Raman spectrometry indicates that the thermal stress has been partially relaxed
by wrinkles formation, visible in AFM images. In addition, we show that despite
the low optical absorption of graphene, optical differential transmission can
be successfully used to prove the monolayer character of the ribbons
Self-consistency in Theories with a Minimal Length
The aim of this paper is to clarify the relation between three different
approaches of theories with a minimal length scale: A modification of the
Lorentz-group in the 'Deformed Special Relativity', theories with a
'Generalized Uncertainty Principle' and those with 'Modified Dispersion
Relations'. It is shown that the first two are equivalent, how they can be
translated into each other, and how the third can be obtained from them. An
adequate theory with a minimal length scale requires all three features to be
present.Comment: typos corrected, published with new title following referee's advic
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