posted on 2015-10-14, 00:00authored byHongyuan Yuan, Shuai Chang, Igor Bargatin, Ning C. Wang, Daniel
C. Riley, Haotian Wang, Jared W. Schwede, J. Provine, Eric Pop, Zhi-Xun Shen, Piero A. Pianetta, Nicholas
A. Melosh, Roger T. Howe
Low work function materials are critical
for energy conversion and electron emission applications. Here, we
demonstrate for the first time that an ultralow work function graphene
is achieved by combining electrostatic gating with a Cs/O surface
coating. A simple device is built from large-area monolayer graphene
grown by chemical vapor deposition, transferred onto 20 nm HfO2 on Si, enabling high electric fields capacitive charge accumulation
in the graphene. We first observed over 0.7 eV work function change
due to electrostatic gating as measured by scanning Kelvin probe force
microscopy and confirmed by conductivity measurements. The deposition
of Cs/O further reduced the work function, as measured by photoemission
in an ultrahigh vacuum environment, which reaches nearly 1 eV, the
lowest reported to date for a conductive, nondiamond material.