| Literature DB >> 28747805 |
J D Albar1, A Summerfield1, T S Cheng1, A Davies1,2, E F Smith2, A N Khlobystov2, C J Mellor1, T Taniguchi3, K Watanabe3, C T Foxon1, L Eaves1, P H Beton1, S V Novikov4.
Abstract
We report the use of a novel atomic carbon source for the molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) of graphene layers on hBN flakes and on sapphire wafers at substrate growth temperatures of ~1400 °C. The source produces a flux of predominantly atomic carbon, which diffuses through the walls of a Joule-heated tantalum tube filled with graphite powder. We demonstrate deposition of carbon on sapphire with carbon deposition rates up to 12 nm/h. Atomic force microscopy measurements reveal the formation of hexagonal moiré patterns when graphene monolayers are grown on hBN flakes. The Raman spectra of the graphene layers grown on hBN and sapphire with the sublimation carbon source and the atomic carbon source are similar, whilst the nature of the carbon aggregates is different - graphitic with the sublimation carbon source and amorphous with the atomic carbon source. At MBE growth temperatures we observe etching of the sapphire wafer surface by the flux from the atomic carbon source, which we have not observed in the MBE growth of graphene with the sublimation carbon source.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28747805 PMCID: PMC5529545 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-07021-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the novel atomic carbon source. Carbon powder is sealed into a thin-walled Ta tube, which is subsequently heated by a DC current.
Figure 2AFM topography images showing the early stages of graphene island nucleation on hBN at a substrate temperature of 1400 °C. Images (a–c) show graphene islands grown for 5 h using the atomic carbon source and images (e–g) show graphene grown for 1 h with a carbon sublimation source. Images (c and g) show the region highlighted by the green boxes in images (b and f) respectively. The profiles in images (d and h) show a line profile across the positions indicated by the blue line in figs (b and f) respectively. The scale bars for the images are as follows; (a and e) 500 nm, (b and f) 50 nm, (c and g) 20 nm.
Figure 3Height distribution of bulk carbon deposits on the hBN surface for the samples shown in Fig. 2 grown using the atomic carbon source (red) and the sublimation carbon source (blue).
Figure 4(a) AFM image of carbon deposited on sapphire after growth at 1400 °C for 5 h using the atomic carbon source. Scale bar: 2 µm. The surface exhibits a series of pits caused by atomic carbon etching. (b) Zoom-in image of the area shown in (a). Scale bar: 400 nm. (c) Line profile taken across the region indicated by the blue line in (a). (d) Line profile taken across the region indicated by the blue line in (b).
Figure 5Raman spectra of the graphene layers grown at ~1400 °C on hBN flakes with a sample growth time of 3 h (a,b). The inset (c) shows a Raman map of the intensity of the 2D band for this growth time, with red regions show a Raman spectrum similar to (a), whilst darker regions show spectra similar to (b). The scale bar in the inset image is 3 µm.
Figure 6XPS wide scan spectra over a full wide energy range for two graphene samples grown for 3 h and 5 h and one reference sample. The inset is the Ta 4d high sensitivity spectra for the same three sample areas, showing the presence of Ta on all except the reference sample.