Literature DB >> 28155928

High vacuum synthesis and ambient stability of bottom-up graphene nanoribbons.

Andrew Fairbrother1, Juan-Ramon Sanchez-Valencia1, Beat Lauber1, Ivan Shorubalko2, Pascal Ruffieux1, Tobias Hintermann3, Roman Fasel1.   

Abstract

Carbon-based nanomaterials such as graphene are at a crucial point in application development, and their promising potential, which has been demonstrated at the laboratory scale, must be translated to an industrial setting for commercialization. Graphene nanoribbons in particular overcome one limitation of graphene in some electronic applications because they exhibit a sizeable bandgap. However, synthesis of bottom-up graphene nanoribbons is most commonly performed under ultra-high vacuum conditions, which are costly and difficult to maintain in a manufacturing environment. Additionally, little is known about the stability of graphene nanoribbons under ambient conditions or during transfer to technologically relevant substrates and subsequent device processing. This work addresses some of these challenges, first by synthesizing bottom-up graphene nanoribbons under easily obtained high vacuum conditions and identifying water and oxygen as the residual gases responsible for interfering with proper coupling during the polymerization step. And second, by using Raman spectroscopy to probe the stability of nanoribbons during storage under ambient conditions, after transfer to arbitrary substrates, and after fabrication of field-effect transistor devices, which shows structurally intact nanoribbons even several months after synthesis. These findings demonstrate the potential of graphene nanoribbon technologies by addressing some limitations which might arise in their commercialization.

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 28155928     DOI: 10.1039/c6nr08975e

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nanoscale        ISSN: 2040-3364            Impact factor:   7.790


  4 in total

Review 1.  Covalent on-surface polymerization.

Authors:  Leonhard Grill; Stefan Hecht
Journal:  Nat Chem       Date:  2020-01-29       Impact factor: 24.427

2.  Circumventing the stability problems of graphene nanoribbon zigzag edges.

Authors:  James Lawrence; Alejandro Berdonces-Layunta; Shayan Edalatmanesh; Jesús Castro-Esteban; Tao Wang; Alejandro Jimenez-Martin; Bruno de la Torre; Rodrigo Castrillo-Bodero; Paula Angulo-Portugal; Mohammed S G Mohammed; Adam Matěj; Manuel Vilas-Varela; Frederik Schiller; Martina Corso; Pavel Jelinek; Diego Peña; Dimas G de Oteyza
Journal:  Nat Chem       Date:  2022-09-26       Impact factor: 24.274

Review 3.  Atomically precise graphene nanoribbons: interplay of structural and electronic properties.

Authors:  R S Koen Houtsma; Joris de la Rie; Meike Stöhr
Journal:  Chem Soc Rev       Date:  2021-06-08       Impact factor: 54.564

4.  Unusual reversibility in molecular break-up of PAHs: the case of pentacene dehydrogenation on Ir(111).

Authors:  Davide Curcio; Emil Sierda; Monica Pozzo; Luca Bignardi; Luca Sbuelz; Paolo Lacovig; Silvano Lizzit; Dario Alfè; Alessandro Baraldi
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2020-11-03       Impact factor: 9.825

  4 in total

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