| Literature DB >> 25853630 |
Grzegorz Lupina1, Julia Kitzmann1, Ioan Costina1, Mindaugas Lukosius1, Christian Wenger1, Andre Wolff1, Sam Vaziri2, Mikael Östling2, Iwona Pasternak3, Aleksandra Krajewska3, Wlodek Strupinski3, Satender Kataria4, Amit Gahoi4, Max C Lemme4, Guenther Ruhl5, Guenther Zoth5, Oliver Luxenhofer6, Wolfgang Mehr1.
Abstract
Integration of graphene with Si microelectronics is very appealing by offering a potentially broad range of new functionalities. New materials to be integrated with the Si platform must conform to stringent purity standards. Here, we investigate graphene layers grown on copper foils by chemical vapor deposition and transferred to silicon wafers by wet etching and electrochemical delamination methods with respect to residual submonolayer metallic contaminations. Regardless of the transfer method and associated cleaning scheme, time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry and total reflection X-ray fluorescence measurements indicate that the graphene sheets are contaminated with residual metals (copper, iron) with a concentration exceeding 10(13) atoms/cm(2). These metal impurities appear to be partially mobile upon thermal treatment, as shown by depth profiling and reduction of the minority charge carrier diffusion length in the silicon substrate. As residual metallic impurities can significantly alter electronic and electrochemical properties of graphene and can severely impede the process of integration with silicon microelectronics, these results reveal that further progress in synthesis, handling, and cleaning of graphene is required to advance electronic and optoelectronic applications.Entities:
Keywords: CVD graphene; TXRF; ToF-SIMS; metallic contaminations; transfer
Year: 2015 PMID: 25853630 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b01261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881