Electron Transport in Multidimensional Fuzzy Graphene
Nanostructures
Posted on 2019-07-02 - 00:00
Atomically
thin two-dimensional (2D) materials offer a range of
superlative electronic and electrochemical properties that facilitate
applications in sensing, energy conversion, and storage. Graphene,
a 2D allotrope of carbon, has exceptional surface area per unit mass
and highly catalytic edges. To leverage these properties, efforts
have been made to synthesize complex three-dimensional (3D) geometries
of graphene, with an eye toward integration into functional electronic
devices. However, the electronic transport properties of such complex
3D structures are not well understood at a microscopic level. Here,
we report electron transport in a 3D arrangement of free-standing
2D graphene flakes along an isolated one-dimensional Si nanowire.
We show that transport through the free-standing graphene network
is dominated by variable-range hopping and leads to negative magnetoresistance,
from cryogenic conditions up to room temperature. Our findings lay
the foundation for studying transport mechanisms in 2D material-based
multidimensional nanostructures.
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Garg, Raghav; Gopalan, Devashish P.; de la Barrera, Sergio C.; Hafiz, Hasnain; Nuhfer, Noel T.; Viswanathan, Venkatasubramanian; et al. (2019). Electron Transport in Multidimensional Fuzzy Graphene
Nanostructures. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b01790