Graphene confined in layered silicate
POSTER
Abstract
The real use of graphene in electronic devices, such as field-effect transistors (FET), meets several principal complications. Opening of graphene band gap usually leads to significant drop of electron mobility; graphene-based devices can be prevented from switching into the OFF state. Some of the complications can be overcome by non-trivial combining of graphene with insulating layers in 2D heterostructures, that allow for fabrication of a graphene-based FET with the high ON and OFF switching ratio1.
We up-scaled preparation of 2D heterostructures by growing graphene from a nitrogen-carbon precursor inside the confined space of a layered silicate2, not by the manual assembly of individual layers. This approach promises simultaneous band-gap opening in graphene and formation of final heterostructures in one step. The resulting structure has the form of a multi-layered sandwich composed of nitrogen-doped (N-doped) graphene-like layers and the single layer sheets of synthetic layered silicate, sodium fluorohectorite2.
1. Britnell, L. et al. Science 286, 947–951 (2012).
2. Breu, J. et al. Chem. Mater. 13, 4213–4220 (2001).
We up-scaled preparation of 2D heterostructures by growing graphene from a nitrogen-carbon precursor inside the confined space of a layered silicate2, not by the manual assembly of individual layers. This approach promises simultaneous band-gap opening in graphene and formation of final heterostructures in one step. The resulting structure has the form of a multi-layered sandwich composed of nitrogen-doped (N-doped) graphene-like layers and the single layer sheets of synthetic layered silicate, sodium fluorohectorite2.
1. Britnell, L. et al. Science 286, 947–951 (2012).
2. Breu, J. et al. Chem. Mater. 13, 4213–4220 (2001).
*This work was funded by the Research Council of Norway Nano2021 project number 250619 and by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 840, TP A6).
Presenters
-
Barbara Pacakova
- Norwegian Univ Tech (NTNU)