Structure and Electronic
Transport in Graphene Wrinkles
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Abstract
Wrinkling is a ubiquitous phenomenon in two-dimensional
membranes.
In particular, in the large-scale growth of graphene on metallic substrates,
high densities of wrinkles are commonly observed. Despite their prevalence
and potential impact on large-scale graphene electronics, relatively
little is known about their structural morphology and electronic properties.
Surveying the graphene landscape using atomic force microscopy, we
found that wrinkles reach a certain maximum height before folding
over. Calculations of the energetics explain the morphological transition
and indicate that the tall ripples are collapsed into narrow standing
wrinkles by van der Waals forces, analogous to large-diameter nanotubes.
Quantum transport calculations show that conductance through these
“collapsed<i> </i>wrinkle” structures is limited
mainly by a density-of-states bottleneck and by interlayer tunneling
across the collapsed bilayer region. Also through systematic measurements
across large numbers of devices with wide “folded<i> </i>wrinkles”, we find a distinct anisotropy in their electrical
resistivity, consistent with our transport simulations. These results
highlight the coupling between morphology and electronic properties,
which has important practical implications for large-scale high-speed
graphene electronics