4.6 Article

Compact mid-infrared graphene thermopile enabled by a nanopatterning technique of electrolyte gates

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 20, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/aada75

Keywords

graphene; 2D materials; nanopatterned electrolyte gates; high carrier density; mid-infrared; thermopile

Funding

  1. US Office of Naval Research [N00014-14-1-0349]
  2. US Army Research Laboratory [W911NF-17-1-0435]
  3. Center for Excitonics
  4. US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0001088]
  5. European Commission H2020 Programme [604391]
  6. European Research Council [307806]
  7. project GRASP [FP7-ICT-2013-613024-GRASP]
  8. Stata Family Presidential Fellowship of MIT
  9. Center for Excitonics, an Energy Frontier Research Center - US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0001088]
  10. Advanced Concept Committee (ACC) program from MIT Lincoln Laboratory
  11. European Commission [FP7-ICT-2013-613024-GRASP]
  12. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
  13. US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering [DE-SC0001819]
  14. National Science Foundation (NSF)

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A central challenge in making two-dimensional (2D) material-based devices faster, smaller, and more efficient is to control their charge carrier density at the nanometer scale. Traditional gating techniques based on capacitive coupling through a gate dielectric cannot generate strong and uniform electric fields at this scale due to divergence of the fields in dielectrics. This field divergence limits the gating strength, boundary sharpness, and minimum feature size of local gates, precluding certain device concepts (such as plasmonics and metamaterials based on spatial charge density variation) and resulting in large device footprints. Here we present a nanopatterned electrolyte gating concept that allows locally creating excess charges by combining electrolyte gating with an ion-impenetrable e-beam-defined resist mask. Electrostatic simulations indicate high carrier density variations of Delta n similar to 10(14) cm(-2) across a length of only 15 nm at the mask boundaries on the surface of a 2D conductor. We implement this technique using cross-linked poly(methyl methacrylate), experimentally prove its ion-impenetrability and demonstrate e-beam patterning of the resist mask down to 30 nm half-pitch resolution. The spatial versatility enables us to demonstrate a compact mid-infrared graphene thermopile with a geometry optimized for Gaussian incident radiation. The thermopile has a small footprint despite the number of thermocouples in the device, paving the way for more compact high-speed thermal detectors and cameras.

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