4.8 Article

Signatures of Phonon and Defect-Assisted Tunneling in Planar Metal-Hexagonal Boron Nitride-Graphene Junctions

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 12, Pages 7982-7987

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b04369

Keywords

Tunneling graphene; hexagonal boron nitride; hBN; hBN defects; Coulomb blockade; phonon-assisted tunneling; IETS

Funding

  1. Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, an NSF Physics Frontiers Center
  2. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [GBMF1250]

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Electron tunneling spectroscopy measurements on van der Waals heterostructures consisting of metal and graphene (or graphite) electrodes separated by atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride tunnel barriers are reported. The tunneling conductance, dI/dV, at low voltages is relatively weak, with a strong enhancement reproducibly observed to occur at around broken vertical bar V broken vertical bar approximate to 50 mV. While the weak tunneling at low energies is attributed to the absence of substantial overlap, in momentum space, of the metal and graphene Fermi surfaces, the enhancement at higher energies signals the onset of inelastic processes in which phonons in the heterostructure provide the momentum necessary to link the Fermi surfaces. Pronounced peaks in the second derivative of the tunnel current, d(2)I/dV(2), are observed at voltages where known phonon modes in the tunnel junction have a high density of states. In addition, features in the tunneling conductance attributed to single electron charging of nanometer-scale defects in the boron nitride are also observed in these devices. The small electronic density of states of graphene allows the charging spectra of these defect states to be electrostatically tuned, leading to Coulomb diamonds in the tunneling conductance.

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