4.8 Article

Stability and Exfoliation of Germanane: A Germanium Graphane Analogue

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 7, Issue 5, Pages 4414-4421

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn4009406

Keywords

2D materials; graphene analogues; layered materials; germanium; germanane; hydrogenated germanene

Funding

  1. Ohio Supercomputing Center
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-0639163, DMR-1201953]
  3. Army Research Office [W911-NF-12-1-0481]
  4. Center for Emergent Materials at The Ohio State University
  5. NSF MRSEC at The Ohio State University [DMR-0820414]
  6. The Ohio State University Materials Research Seed Grant Program
  7. The Ohio State University

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Graphene's success has shown not only that it is possible to create stable, single-atom-thick sheets from a crystalline solid but that these materials have fundamentally different properties than the parent material. We have synthesized for the first time, millimeter-scale crystals of a hydrogen-terminated germanium multilayered graphane analogue (germanane, GeH) from the topochemical deintercalation of CaGe2. This layered van der Waals solid is analogous to multilayered graphane (CH). The surface layer of GeH only slowly oxidizes in air over the span of 5 months, while the underlying layers are resilient to oxidation based on X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy measurements. The GeH is thermally stable up to 75 degrees C; however, above this temperature amorphization and dehydrogenation begin to occur. These sheets can be mechanically exfoliated as single and few layers onto SiO2/Si surfaces. This material represents a new class of covalently terminated graphane analogues and has great potential for a wide range of optoelectronic and sensing applications, especially since theory predicts a direct band gap of 1.53 eV and an electron mobility as. five times higher than that of bulk Ge.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available