4.8 Article

Monolayer Solid-State Electrolyte for Electric Double Layer Gating of Graphene Field-Effect Transistors

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages 5453-5464

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b08505

Keywords

ion gating; electric double layer; two-dimensional; electrolyte; field-effect transistor; graphene; phthalocyanine

Funding

  1. Center for Low Energy Systems Technology (LEAST), one of six centers of STARnet, a Semiconductor Research Corporation program - MARCO
  2. DARPA
  3. NSF [ECCS-GOALI-1408425]

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The electrostatic gating of graphene field-effect transistors is demonstrated using a monolayer electrolyte. The electrolyte, cobalt crown ether phthalocyanine (CoCrPc) and LiClO4, is deposited as a monolayer on the graphene channel, essentially creating an additional two-dimensional layer on top of graphene. The crown ethers on the CoCrPc solvate lithium ions and the ion location is modulated by a backgate without requiring liquid solvent.. Ions dope the channel by inducing image charges; the doping level (i.e., induced charge density) can be modulated by the backgate bias with the extent of the surface potential change being controlled by the magnitude and polarity of the backgate bias. With a crown ether to Le ratio of 5:1, programming tests for which the backgate is held at -V-BG shift the Dirac point by similar to 15 V, corresponding to a sheet carrier density on the order of 10(12) cm(-2). This charge carrier density agrees with the packing density of monolayer CoCrPc on graphene that would be expected with one Le for every five crown ethers (at the maximum possible Li+ concentration, 10(13) cm(-2) is predicted). The crown ethers provide two stable states for the Li+: one near the graphene channel (low-resistance state) and one similar to 5 angstrom away from the channel. (high-resistance state). Initial state retention measurements indicate that the two states can be maintained for at least 30 min (maximum time monitored), which is 106 times longer than polymer-based electrolytes at room temperature, with at least a 250 Omega mu m difference between the channel resistance in the high- and low-resistance states.

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