4.8 Article

Opening an Electrical Band Gap of Bilayer Graphene with Molecular Doping

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 5, Issue 9, Pages 7517-7524

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn202463g

Keywords

bilayer graphene; band gap opening; transistor; Raman spectroscopy; doping; on/off current ratio; triazine

Funding

  1. Research Center for Applied Sciences
  2. Academia Sinica
  3. National Science Council Taiwan [NSC-99-2112-M-001-021-MY3, 99-2738-M-001-001]
  4. National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan

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The opening of an electrical band l gap in graphene Is crucial for its application for logic circuits. Recent studies have shown that an energy gap in Bernal-stacked bilayer graphene can be generated by applying an electric displacement field. Molecular doping has also been proposed to open the electrical gap of bilayer graphene by breaking either in-plane symmetry or inversion symmetry; however, no direct observation of an electrical gap has been reported. Here we discover that the organic molecule triazine is able to form a uniform thin coating on the top surface of a bilayer graphene, which efficiently blocks the accessible doping sites and prevents ambient p-doping on the top layer. The charge distribution asymmetry between the top and bottom layers can then be enhanced simply by increasing the p-doping from oxygen/moisture to the bottom layer. The on/off current ratio for a bottom-gated bilayer transistor operated in ambient condition Is improved by at least 1 order of magnitude. The estimated electrical band gap is up to similar to 111 meV at room temperature. The observed electrical band gap dependence on the hole-carrier density increase agrees well with the recent density-functional theory calculations. This research provides a simple method to obtain a graphene bilayer transistor with a moderate on/off current ratio, which can be stably operated in air without the need to use an additional top gate.

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