Layer-controllable graphene by plasma thinning and post-annealing
Author(s)
Zhang, Lufang
Feng, Shaopeng
Xiao, Shaoqing
Shen, Gang
Zhang, Xiumei
Nan, Haiyan
Gu, Xiaofeng
Ostrikov, Kostya Ken
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2018
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The electronic structure of graphene depends crucially on its layer number and therefore engineering the number of graphene’s atomic stacking layers is of great importance for the preparation of graphene-based devices. In this paper, we demonstrated a relatively less invasive, high-throughput and uniform large-area plasma thinning of graphene based on direct bombardment effect of fast-moving ionic hydrogen or argon species. Any desired number of graphene layers including trilayer, bilayer and monolayer can be obtained. Structural changes of graphene layers are studied by optical microscopy, Raman spectroscopy and atomic force ...
View more >The electronic structure of graphene depends crucially on its layer number and therefore engineering the number of graphene’s atomic stacking layers is of great importance for the preparation of graphene-based devices. In this paper, we demonstrated a relatively less invasive, high-throughput and uniform large-area plasma thinning of graphene based on direct bombardment effect of fast-moving ionic hydrogen or argon species. Any desired number of graphene layers including trilayer, bilayer and monolayer can be obtained. Structural changes of graphene layers are studied by optical microscopy, Raman spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy. Post annealing is adopted to self-heal the lattice defects induced by the ion bombardment effect. This plasma etching technique is efficient and compatible with semiconductor manufacturing processes, and may find important applications for graphene-based device fabrication.
View less >
View more >The electronic structure of graphene depends crucially on its layer number and therefore engineering the number of graphene’s atomic stacking layers is of great importance for the preparation of graphene-based devices. In this paper, we demonstrated a relatively less invasive, high-throughput and uniform large-area plasma thinning of graphene based on direct bombardment effect of fast-moving ionic hydrogen or argon species. Any desired number of graphene layers including trilayer, bilayer and monolayer can be obtained. Structural changes of graphene layers are studied by optical microscopy, Raman spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy. Post annealing is adopted to self-heal the lattice defects induced by the ion bombardment effect. This plasma etching technique is efficient and compatible with semiconductor manufacturing processes, and may find important applications for graphene-based device fabrication.
View less >
Journal Title
APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume
441
Subject
Materials engineering