| Literature DB >> 29739956 |
Servin Rathi1, Inyeal Lee1, Moonshik Kang1,2, Dongsuk Lim1, Yoontae Lee1, Serhan Yamacli3, Han-Ik Joh4, Seongsu Kim5, Sang-Woo Kim5, Sun Jin Yun6, Sukwon Choi7, Gil-Ho Kim8.
Abstract
The fractions of various functional groups in graphene oxide (GO) are directly related to its electrical and chemical properties and can be controlled by various reduction methods like thermal, chemical and optical. However, a method with sufficient controllability to regulate the reduction process has been missing. In this work, a hybrid method of thermal and joule heating processes is demonstrated where a progressive control of the ratio of various functional groups can be achieved in a localized area. With this precise control of carbon-oxygen ratio, negative differential resistance (NDR) is observed in the current-voltage characteristics of a two-terminal device in the ambient environment due to charge-activated electrochemical reactions at the GO surface. This experimental observation correlates with the optical and chemical characterizations. This NDR behavior offers new opportunities for the fabrication and application of such novel electronic devices in a wide range of devices applications including switches and oscillators.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29739956 PMCID: PMC5940784 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-22355-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Illustration and optical images of fabricated devices, and Raman spectra. (a–c) Schematic of the fabricated devices. (d–e) Optical microscope image (the scale bar represents 4 µm) of the pre- and post-reduced device illustrating the color variation in the reduction process. (f) Schematic energy band diagram illustrating localized electronic states at the band edges; the energy gap between conduction and valence band edges depends on the molecular compositions and their configurations. (g) Raman spectra of GO and rGO. The inset shows the zoomed-in graph of the G peak.
Figure 2Chemical bonding analysis of graphene oxide GO. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy peaks of carbon and oxygen functional group of GO flakes annealed at temperatures of (a) 100, (b) 200, (c) 300, and (d) 400 °C for 3 min.
Figure 3Observation of negative differential resistance (NDR) in reduced graphene oxide device. (a) Schematic illustration of the device under measurement, where the inset images show the removal of oxygen functional groups by Joule heating process. I–V characteristics for (b) successive voltage sweeps from 1st to 9th, (c) selective voltage sweeps from 1st to 3rd with the inset illustrating the transformation of GO-metal contacts from resistive to conductive after Joule heating induced reduction of GO in the successive voltage sweeps. (d) selective voltage sweeps from 1st to 5th with the description of key NDR metric.
Figure 4NDR mechanism in reduced graphene oxide device. (a) Schematic illustration of the device under measurement, where the upper image shows measurement under vacuum and the lower one in the ambient environment and the blue arrows in both schematics indicate current direction. Electric charge in the channel lowers the activation energy of electrochemical reactions, involving thin adsorbed water layer, which results in the chemisorption of the dissociated OH− ions on the GO surface, as shown by curved red arrows. (b) I-V characteristics showing measurement in the ambient and vacuum environment. (c) Low power Raman spectra of GO and Joule heated GO, where the measurement was carried out twice to record the reduction in consecutive sweeps at the same spot. The inset shows a microscopic image of the sample after two electrical sweeps. (d) I-V characteristics of the GO device annealed from 100 oC to 400 oC with the inset figure showing the same data in semi-log scale.