RESUMO
Graphene-based photodetectors have shown responsivities up to 108 A/W and photoconductive gains up to 108 electrons per photon. These photodetectors rely on a highly absorbing layer in close proximity to graphene, which induces a shift of the graphene chemical potential upon absorption, hence modifying its channel resistance. However, due to the semimetallic nature of graphene, the readout requires dark currents of hundreds of microamperes up to milliamperes, leading to high power consumption needed for the device operation. Here, we propose a different approach for highly responsive graphene-based photodetectors with orders of magnitude lower dark-current levels. A shift of the graphene chemical potential caused by light absorption in a layer of colloidal quantum dots induces a variation of the current flowing across a metal-insulator-graphene diode structure. Owing to the low density of states of graphene near the neutrality point, the light-induced shift in chemical potential can be relatively large, dramatically changing the amount of current flowing across the insulating barrier and giving rise to an alternative gain mechanism. This readout requires dark currents of hundreds of nanoamperes up to a few microamperes, orders of magnitude lower than that of other graphene-based photodetectors, while keeping responsivities of â¼70 A/W in the infrared, almost 2 orders of magnitude higher than that of established germanium on silicon and indium gallium arsenide infrared photodetectors. This makes the device appealing for applications where high responsivity and low power consumption are required.
RESUMO
Graphene grown on Cu by chemical vapor deposition is rough due to the surface roughening of Cu for releasing interfacial thermal stress and/or graphene bending energy. The roughness degrades the electrical conductance and mechanical strength of graphene. Here, by using vicinal Cu(111) and flat Cu(111) as model substrates, we investigated the critical role of original surface topography on the surface deformation of Cu covered by graphene. We demonstrated that terrace steps on vicinal Cu(111) dominate the formation of step bunches (SBs). Atomically flat graphene with roughness down to 0.2 nm was grown on flat Cu(111) films. When SB-induced ripples were avoided, as-grown ultraflat graphene maintained its flat feature after transfer. The ultraflat graphene exhibited extraordinary mechanical properties with Young's modulus ≈ 940 GPa and strength ≈ 117 GPa, comparable to mechanical exfoliated ones. Molecular dynamics simulation revealed the mechanism of softened elastic response and weakened strength of graphene with rippled structures.
RESUMO
Acoustic graphene plasmons are highly confined electromagnetic modes carrying large momentum and low loss in the mid-infrared and terahertz spectra. However, until now they have been restricted to micrometer-scale areas, reducing their confinement potential by several orders of magnitude. Using a graphene-based magnetic resonator, we realized single, nanometer-scale acoustic graphene plasmon cavities, reaching mode volume confinement factors of ~5 × 1010 Such a cavity acts as a mid-infrared nanoantenna, which is efficiently excited from the far field and is electrically tunable over an extremely large broadband spectrum. Our approach provides a platform for studying ultrastrong-coupling phenomena, such as chemical manipulation via vibrational strong coupling, as well as a path to efficient detectors and sensors operating in this long-wavelength spectral range.
RESUMO
Ultrasound detection is one of the most-important nondestructive subsurface characterization tools for materials, the goal of which is to laterally resolve the subsurface structure with nanometer or even atomic resolution. In recent years, graphene resonators have attracted attention for their use in loudspeakers and ultrasound radios, showing their potential for realizing communication systems with air-carried ultrasound. Here, we show a graphene resonator that detects ultrasound vibrations propagating through the substrate on which it was fabricated. We ultimately achieve a resolution of â¼7 pm/[Formula: see text] in ultrasound amplitude at frequencies up to 100 MHz. Thanks to an extremely high nonlinearity in the mechanical restoring force, the resonance frequency itself can also be used for ultrasound detection. We observe a shift of 120 kHz at a resonance frequency of 65 MHz for an induced vibration amplitude of 100 pm with a resolution of 25 pm. Remarkably, the nonlinearity also explains the generally observed asymmetry in the resonance frequency tuning of the resonator when it is pulled upon with an electrostatic gate. This work puts forward a sensor design that fits onto an atomic force microscope cantilever and therefore promises direct ultrasound detection at the nanoscale for nondestructive subsurface characterization.
RESUMO
There are a number of theoretical proposals based on strain engineering of graphene and other two-dimensional materials, however purely mechanical control of strain fields in these systems has remained a major challenge. The two approaches mostly used so far either couple the electrical and mechanical properties of the system simultaneously or introduce some unwanted disturbances due to the substrate. Here, we report on silicon micromachined comb-drive actuators to controllably and reproducibly induce strain in a suspended graphene sheet in an entirely mechanical way. We use spatially resolved confocal Raman spectroscopy to quantify the induced strain, and we show that different strain fields can be obtained by engineering the clamping geometry, including tunable strain gradients of up to 1.4%/µm. Our approach also allows for multiple axis straining and is equally applicable to other two-dimensional materials, opening the door to investigating their mechanical and electromechanical properties. Our measurements also clearly identify defects at the edges of a graphene sheet as being weak spots responsible for its mechanical failure.
RESUMO
Few layer graphene systems such as Bernal stacked bilayer and rhombohedral (ABC-) stacked trilayer offer the unique possibility to open an electric field tunable energy gap. To date, this energy gap has been experimentally confirmed in optical spectroscopy. Here we report the first direct observation of the electric field tunable energy gap in electronic transport experiments on doubly gated suspended ABC-trilayer graphene. From a systematic study of the nonlinearities in current versus voltage characteristics and the temperature dependence of the conductivity, we demonstrate that thermally activated transport over the energy-gap dominates the electrical response of these transistors. The estimated values for energy gap from the temperature dependence and from the current voltage characteristics follow the theoretically expected electric field dependence with critical exponent 3/2. These experiments indicate that high quality few-layer graphene are suitable candidates for exploring novel tunable terahertz light sources and detectors.