| Literature DB >> 23616943 |
Gabriele Fisichella1, Salvatore Di Franco, Patrick Fiorenza, Raffaella Lo Nigro, Fabrizio Roccaforte, Cristina Tudisco, Guido G Condorelli, Nicolò Piluso, Noemi Spartà, Stella Lo Verso, Corrado Accardi, Cristina Tringali, Sebastiano Ravesi, Filippo Giannazzo.
Abstract
Chemical vapour deposition (CVD) on catalytic metals is one of main approaches for high-quality graphene growth over large areas. However, a subsequent transfer step to an insulating substrate is required in order to use the graphene for electronic applications. This step can severely affect both the structural integrity and the electronic properties of the graphene membrane. In this paper, we investigated the morphological and electrical properties of CVD graphene transferred onto SiO2 and on a polymeric substrate (poly(ethylene-2,6-naphthalene dicarboxylate), briefly PEN), suitable for microelectronics and flexible electronics applications, respectively. The electrical properties (sheet resistance, mobility, carrier density) of the transferred graphene as well as the specific contact resistance of metal contacts onto graphene were investigated by using properly designed test patterns. While a sheet resistance R sh ≈ 1.7 kΩ/sq and a specific contact resistance ρc ≈ 15 kΩ·μm have been measured for graphene transferred onto SiO2, about 2.3× higher R sh and about 8× higher ρc values were obtained for graphene on PEN. High-resolution current mapping by torsion resonant conductive atomic force microscopy (TRCAFM) provided an insight into the nanoscale mechanisms responsible for the very high ρc in the case of graphene on PEN, showing a ca. 10× smaller "effective" area for current injection than in the case of graphene on SiO2.Entities:
Keywords: PEN; SiO2; conductive AFM; contact resistance; graphene; mobility; sheet resistance
Year: 2013 PMID: 23616943 PMCID: PMC3628692 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.4.24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1As-grown graphene on a copper foil: (a) Optical image, (b) Raman Spectroscopy, (c) AFM morphology and (d) phase.
Figure 2Optical image of a (13 × 10) mm2 graphene membrane transferred onto SiO2 (a), and AFM morphologies at (5 × 5) μm2 (b) and (1 × 1) μm2 (c) magnifications. Line scans on a peculiar corrugation of the graphene membrane (d) and across a microscopic crack (e).
Figure 3Tapping-mode AFM images of the bare PEN surface (a) and of graphene transferred onto PEN (b).
Figure 4(a) Optical Image of a TLM structure, (b) I–V characteristics measured between pairs of contacts at different distances and (c) extracted resistance plotted versus distance. From the linear fit of R versus d, the sheet resistance and the specific contact resistance were evaluated.
Figure 5(a) Schematic representation of the back-gated TLM device. (b) Resistance versus distance between adjacent contacts for different Vg values from −40 to 40 V. Extracted specific contact resistance ρc (c) and sheet resistance Rsh (d) versus Vg. The insert in (d) displays the linear fit of the conductance data to extract the hole density and mobility in graphene.
Comparison between the sheet resistance and the metal/graphene specific contact resistance of graphene deposited on SiO2 and on PEN.
| SiO2 | PEN | |
| 1.7 ± 0.1 | 3.9 ± 0.1 | |
| ρc (kΩ·μm) | 15.1 ± 1.2 | 114.4 ± 2.3 |
Figure 6TRCAFM of Graphene on SiO2: (a) morphology and (c) the related histogram, (b) current map and (d) the related histogram. TRCAFM of Graphene on PEN: (a) morphology and (c) the related histogram, (b) current map and (d) the related histogram.