Light-Speed Nanotech: Controlling the Nature of Graphene
Researchers at Rensselaer have developed
a new method for controlling the conductive nature of
graphene. Pictured is a rendering of two sheets of
graphene, each with the thickness of just a single carbon
atom, resting on top of a silicon dioxide
substrate.
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Researchers “tune” graphene’s properties by growing
it on different surfaces
Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have
discovered a new method for controlling the nature of graphene,
bringing academia and industry potentially one step closer to
realizing the mass production of graphene-based
nanoelectronics.
Graphene, a one-atom-thick sheet of carbon, was discovered
in 2004 and is considered a potential heir to copper and
silicon as the fundamental building blocks of
nanoelectronics.
With help from an underlying substrate, researchers for the
first time have demonstrated the ability to control the nature
of graphene. Saroj Nayak, an associate professor in
Rensselaer’s Department of Physics, Applied Physics, and
Astronomy, along with Philip Shemella, a postdoctoral research
associate in the same department, have determined that the
chemistry of the surface on which graphene is deposited plays a
key role in shaping the material’s conductive properties. The
results are based on large-scale quantum mechanical
simulations.
Results show that when deposited on a surface treated with
oxygen, graphene exhibits semiconductor properties. When
deposited on a material treated with hydrogen, however,
graphene exhibits metallic properties.
“Depending on the chemistry of the surface, we can control
the nature of the graphene to be metallic or semiconductor,”
Nayak said. “Essentially, we are ‘tuning’ the electrical
properties of material to suit our needs.”
Conventionally, whenever a batch of graphene nanostructures
is produced, some of the graphene is metallic, while the rest
is semiconductor. It would be nearly impossible to separate the
two on a large scale, Nayak said, yet realizing new graphene
devices would require that they be comprised solely of metallic
or semiconductor graphene. The new method for “tuning” the
nature of graphene is a key step to making this possible, he
said.
Graphene’s excellent conductive properties make it
attractive to researchers. Even at room temperature, electrons
pass effortlessly, near the speed of light and with little
resistance. This means a graphene interconnect would likely
stay much cooler than a copper interconnect of the same size.
Cooler is better, as heat produced by interconnects can have
negative effects on both a computer chip’s speed and
performance.
Results of the study were published this week in the paper
“Electronic structure and band-gap modulation of graphene via
substrate surface chemistry” in Applied Physics
Letters, and are featured on the cover of the journal’s
January 19 issue.
Large-scale quantum simulations for the study were run on
Rensselaer’s supercomputing system, the Computational Center
for Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI).
Researchers received funding for the project from the New
York State Interconnect Focus Center at Rensselaer.
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Published
January 20,
2009 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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