4.7 Article

Highly effective gating of graphene on GaN

Journal

APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume 560, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsusc.2021.149939

Keywords

Graphene; Gallium nitride; Gated structures; Raman spectroscopy; Schottky diode; Electroreflectance

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education [DI2014 015744]
  2. National Science Centre, Poland [2014/13/N/ST3/03772]
  3. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) [EOS 30467715]
  4. IDUB project

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The study demonstrates effective gating of graphene at low bias using four-layered graphene/gallium nitride (GaN) Schottky diodes and undoped GaN spacer, suggesting their potential for applications. The observed Raman G band position shift and splitting indicate turbostratic layer stacking and high potential gradient near the Schottky junction. Analysis based on electroreflectance measurements and a modified Richardson equation confirms graphene behavior as a capacitor at reverse bias on n-GaN separated by an undoped GaN spacer.
By using four-layered graphene/gallium nitride (GaN) Schottky diodes with an undoped GaN spacer, we demonstrate highly effective gating of graphene at low bias rendering this type of structure very promising for potential applications. An observed Raman G band position shift larger than 8.5 cm-1 corresponds to an increase in carrier concentration of about 1.2.1013 cm-2. The presence of a distinct G band splitting together with a narrow symmetric 2D band indicates turbostratic layer stacking and suggests the presence of a high potential gradient near the Schottky junction even at zero bias. An analysis based on electroreflectance measurements and a modified Richardson equation confirmed that graphene on n-GaN separated by an undoped GaN spacer behaves like a capacitor at reverse bias. At least 60% of G subband position shifts occur at forward bias, which is related to a rapid reduction of electric field near the Schottky junction. Our studies demonstrate the usefulness of few layer turbostratic graphene deposited on GaN for tracing electron-phonon coupling in graphene. Multilayer graphene also provides uniform and stable electric contacts. Moreover, the observed bias sensitive G band splitting can be used as an indicator of charge transfer in sensor applications in the low bias regime.

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