| Literature DB >> 24451588 |
Akimitsu Narita1, Xinliang Feng1, Yenny Hernandez1, Søren A Jensen2, Mischa Bonn1, Huafeng Yang3, Ivan A Verzhbitskiy4, Cinzia Casiraghi5, Michael Ryan Hansen6, Amelie H R Koch1, George Fytas7, Oleksandr Ivasenko8, Bing Li8, Kunal S Mali8, Tatyana Balandina8, Sankarapillai Mahesh8, Steven De Feyter8, Klaus Müllen1.
Abstract
The properties of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) make them good candidates for next-generation electronic materials. Whereas 'top-down' methods, such as the lithographical patterning of graphene and the unzipping of carbon nanotubes, give mixtures of different GNRs, structurally well-defined GNRs can be made using a 'bottom-up' organic synthesis approach through solution-mediated or surface-assisted cyclodehydrogenation reactions. Specifically, non-planar polyphenylene precursors were first 'built up' from small molecules, and then 'graphitized' and 'planarized' to yield GNRs. However, fabrication of processable and longitudinally well-extended GNRs has remained a major challenge. Here we report a bottom-up solution synthesis of long (>200 nm) liquid-phase-processable GNRs with a well-defined structure and a large optical bandgap of 1.88 eV. Self-assembled monolayers of GNRs can be observed by scanning probe microscopy, and non-contact time-resolved terahertz conductivity measurements reveal excellent charge-carrier mobility within individual GNRs. Such structurally well-defined GNRs may prove useful for fundamental studies of graphene nanostructures, as well as the development of GNR-based nanoelectronics.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24451588 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1819
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427