Electronic and Mechanical Properties of Graphene–Germanium
Interfaces Grown by Chemical Vapor Deposition
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Abstract
Epitaxially oriented wafer-scale
graphene grown directly on semiconducting Ge substrates is of high
interest for both fundamental science and electronic device applications.
To date, however, this material system remains relatively unexplored
structurally and electronically, particularly at the atomic scale.
To further understand the nature of the interface between graphene
and Ge, we utilize ultrahigh vacuum scanning tunneling microscopy
(STM) and scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) along with Raman and
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to probe interfacial atomic structure
and chemistry. STS reveals significant differences in electronic interactions
between graphene and Ge(110)/Ge(111), which is consistent with a model
of stronger interaction on Ge(110) leading to epitaxial growth. Raman
spectra indicate that the graphene is considerably strained after
growth, with more point-to-point variation on Ge(111). Furthermore,
this native strain influences the atomic structure of the interface
by inducing metastable and previously unobserved Ge surface reconstructions
following annealing. These nonequilibrium reconstructions cover >90%
of the surface and, in turn, modify both the electronic and mechanical
properties of the graphene overlayer. Finally, graphene on Ge(001)
represents the extreme strain case, where graphene drives the reorganization
of the Ge surface into [107] facets. From this work, it is clear that
the interaction between graphene and the underlying Ge is not only
dependent on the substrate crystallographic orientation, but is also
tunable and strongly related to the atomic reconfiguration of the
graphene–Ge interface