2D Perfection in a 3D World
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Graphene's unique electronic structure is characterized by conical
valence and conduction bands that meet at a single point in momentum
space (the Dirac crossing energy). The researchers demonstrated
that through selective control of the carrier concentration in
the graphene layers, the band structure can be easily tuned near
the Dirac crossing. Similar control can be achieved in principle
by varying the electric field across the bilayer film in an atomic-scale
switching device.
If undoped, a bilayer of graphene sheets is considered a semimetal,
a material in which the conduction and valence bands slightly overlap
in energy. When the researchers first synthesized their bilayer
graphene films onto the silicon carbide substrate, the graphene
became a weak n-type semiconductor, having a slight excess
of negatively charged electrons; the interface layer acquired an
excess of conduction electrons from the substrate, creating a small
bandgap.
Potassium atoms deposited onto the graphene donated their lone
valence electrons to the graphene's surface layer, initially closing
the bandgap. However, as the potassium deposition continued, the
bandgap was reopened by the excess of electron charge-carriers
on the graphene's surface layer. Progressive potassium deposition
further enhanced the n-type doping.
These results demonstrate that by controlling the carrier density
in a bilayer of graphene, the occupation of electronic states near
the Fermi level (EF) and the magnitude of the gap between
the valence band and conduction band can be manipulated. This control
over the band structure suggests the potential application of bilayer
graphene to switching functions in electronic devices with a thickness
of only two atomic layers.
Evolution of gap closing and reopening by changing the doping level by potassium adsorption. Experimental and theoretical bands (solid lines) (A) for an as-prepared graphene bilayer and (B and C) with progressive adsorption of potassium are shown. The number of doping electrons per unit cell, estimated from the relative size of the Fermi surface, is indicated at the top of each panel.
This experiment was a tour de force on multiple levels. In addition
to characterizing and controlling the graphene bandgap, the researchers
found the current capacity to be surprisingly high. At a temperature
of 30 kelvin, cold enough to preclude any conduction through the
substrate, they were able to pass 400 milliamps through a macroscopic
sample. This corresponded to a current of about 20 million amps
per square centimeter, the same order of magnitude reported for
single-walled carbon nanotubes and graphene multilayers.
The results of this experiment showcase ARPES and the techniques
developed at Beamline 7.0.1.
This ability to obtain detailed information about changes that
occur on a small scale in momentum space, and which are induced
by only a small, dispersed distribution of atoms, means that useful
information can be obtained not only for electronic applications
but also for chemical applications (such as sensors). The researchers
are now focusing on combining this capability with future high-spatial-resolution
photoemission in order to derive useful information from real-world
devices.
Research conducted by T. Ohta (Berkeley Lab and Fritz-Haber-Institut
der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Germany), A. Bostwick and E. Rotenberg
(Berkeley Lab), K. Horn (Fritz-Haber-Institut der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft,
Germany), and T. Seyller (Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg,
Germany).
Research funding: U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Sciences
(BES), and the Max Planck Society and the European Science Foundation
(under the EUROCORES SONS program).
Publication about this research: T. Ohta, A. Bostwick,
T. Seyller, K. Horn, and E. Rotenberg, "Controlling
the electronic structure of bilayer graphene," Science 313,
951 (2006).
ALSNews
Vol. 275, April 25, 2007
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