4.8 Article

On-Surface Synthesis and Characterization of 9-Atom Wide Armchair Graphene Nanoribbons

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 1380-1388

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b06405

Keywords

graphene nanoribbons; bottom-up synthesis; Scanning tunneling spectroscopy; Raman spectroscopy; on-surface chemistry

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
  2. Office of Naval Research BRC Program
  3. European Science Foundation (ESF)
  4. European Commission Graphene Flagship
  5. State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation via the COST Action [MP0901 NanoTP]
  6. Eugene P. Wigner Fellowship at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  7. Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (CSCS) [s670]

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The bottom-up approach to synthesize graphene nanoribbons strives not only to introduce a band gap into the electronic structure of graphene but also to accurately tune its value by designing both the width and edge structure of the ribbons with atomic precision. We report the synthesis of an armchair graphene nanoribbon with a width of nine carbon atoms on Au(111) through surface-assisted aryl aryl coupling and subsequent cyclodehydrogenation of a properly chosen molecular precursor. By combining high-resolution atomic force microscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy, we demonstrate that the atomic structure of the fabricated ribbons is exactly as designed. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and Fourier-transformed scanning tunneling spectroscopy reveal an electronic band gap of 1.4 eV and effective masses of approximate to 0.1 m(e) for both electrons and holes, constituting a substantial improvement over previous efforts toward the development of transistor applications. We use ab initio calculations to gain insight into the dependence of the Raman spectra on excitation wavelength as well as to rationalize the symmetry-dependent contribution of the ribbons' electronic states to the tunneling current. We propose a simple rule for the visibility of frontier electronic bands of armchair graphene nanoribbons in scanning tunneling spectroscopy.

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