Date | 20th, Apr 2020 |
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Bumps on a road slow down our pace, so do corrugations in graphene to traveling electrons. By flattening the corrugations out, we help electrons move effectively faster through a graphene sheet.
Limits because of microscopic distortions
The sample quality of graphene has been improved significantly since its discovery. One factor that limited further improvements has not been investigated directly so far, namely corrugations in the graphene sheet, i.e. microscopic distortions that form even when placed on atomically flat surfaces. Such corrugations can scatter the electrons when moving through an electronic device.
The team of professor Christian Schönenberger of the Swiss Nanoscience Institute and Department of Physics at the University of Basel has developed a technique to pull the graphene sheet on two opposite sides and thereby flattening and smoothing it. “It is similar to pulling on a piece of crumpled paper which irons out wrinkles and folds,” says Dr. Lujun Wang, first author of the study. “After this process, the electrons travel effectively faster through the graphene sheet, their “mobility” increases, demonstrating an improved sample quality,” his supervisor Dr. Andreas Baumgartner adds.
These findings not only help us to further understand the electron transport in graphene but also provide instructions for studying other two-dimensional materials.
Reference: “Mobility Enhancement in Graphene by in situ Reduction of Random Strain Fluctuations” by Lujun Wang, Péter Makk, Simon Zihlmann, Andreas Baumgartner, David I. Indolese, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi and Christian Schönenberger, 15 April 2020, Physical Review Letters.DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.157701