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Nanoscale Fabrication of Microwave Detectors from Commercially-Available CVD-Grown Monolayer Graphene

Abstract

Using commercially-available monolayer graphene, synthesized by means of chemical vapor deposition, microwave power sensing elements have been nanofabricated and integrated with microwave-grade test structures suitable for on-wafer probing. The graphene, situated on a thermal oxide, was first cleaned of stray contaminants in a forming gas environment briefly held at 250 degrees Celsius using a rapid thermal annealer. Immediately following this step, the graphene was passivated with a protective aluminum oxide layer (approximately S nm in thickness). Micrometer-scale Corbino disc test structures were then fabricated in direct contact with the graphene using a self-aligned process, which relies on the fact that tetramethylammonium hydroxide develops the photoresist while removing the aluminum oxide. Graphene nanoribbons (with widths as small 400 nm) were then fabricated across the Corbino disc gaps using electron-beam writing in conjunction with a negative tone resist. The same developer exposed the majority of the graphene while defining nanometer-scale lines of photoresist stacked upon aluminum oxide. These stacks served as etch-stops while the unprotected graphene was ion-milled in an oxygen plasma. Finally, the photoresist was removed leaving behind passivated graphene nanoribbons. Damage caused by the fabrication was evaluated by comparing the Raman spectra of the grapheme before and after processing

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