DocumentCode
1348830
Title
Low-Energy X-ray and Ozone-Exposure Induced Defect Formation in Graphene Materials and Devices
Author
Zhang, En Xia ; Newaz, A.K.M. ; Wang, Bin ; Bhandaru, Shweta ; Zhang, C. Xuan ; Fleetwood, Daniel M. ; Bolotin, Kirill I. ; Pantelides, Sokrates T. ; Alles, Michael L. ; Schrimpf, Ronald D. ; Weiss, Sharon M. ; Reed, Robert A. ; Weller, Robert A.
Author_Institution
Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci. Dept., Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville, TN, USA
Volume
58
Issue
6
fYear
2011
Firstpage
2961
Lastpage
2967
Abstract
We have evaluated the responses of graphene materials and devices to 10-keV X-ray irradiation and ozone exposure. Large positive shifts are observed in the current-voltage characteristics of graphene-on- SiO2 transistors irradiated under negative gate bias. Moreover, significant radiation-induced increases are found in the resistance of suspended graphene layers; the charge neutral point (CNP) of the graphene layer also shifts positively with increasing total dose. Raman spectroscopy shows that similar defects are generated in graphene-on-SiO2 sheets by 10-keV X-ray irradiation and ozone exposure. First principles calculations of the relevant binding energies, and reaction and diffusion barriers for oxygen on graphene, strongly suggest that oxygen adsorption and reactions, along with the resulting p -type doping, can lead to the observed degradation of irradiated or ozone-exposed graphene materials and devices.
Keywords
Raman spectra; X-ray effects; ab initio calculations; adsorption; binding energy; graphene; molecular electronics; silicon compounds; C-SiO2; Raman spectroscopy; X-ray irradiation; binding energies; charge neutral point; current-voltage characteristics; diffusion barrier; electron volt energy 10 keV; first principles calculations; graphene device response; graphene material response; graphene-on-silica sheets; graphene-on-silica transistors; low-energy X-ray induced defect formation; negative gate bias; oxygen adsorption; oxygen reactions; ozone-exposure induced defect formation; p -type doping; reaction barrier; suspended graphene layer resistance; total dose; Annealing; Doping; Ionizing radiation; Logic gates; Radiation effects; Raman scattering; Transistors; Graphene; Raman spectroscopy; total ionizing dose radiation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNS.2011.2167519
Filename
6043894
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