The role of precursor coverage in the synthesis and substrate transfer of graphene nanoribbons
Graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) with atomically precise widths and edge topologies have well-defined band gaps that depend on ribbon dimensions, making them ideal for room-temperature switching applications like field-effect transistors (FETs). For efficient device integration, it is crucial to optimize...
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Zusammenfassung: | Graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) with atomically precise widths and edge
topologies have well-defined band gaps that depend on ribbon dimensions, making
them ideal for room-temperature switching applications like field-effect
transistors (FETs). For efficient device integration, it is crucial to optimize
growth conditions to maximize GNR length and, consequently, device yield. Here,
we investigate the growth and alignment of 9-atom-wide armchair graphene
nanoribbons (9-AGNRs) on a vicinal gold substrate, Au(788), with varying
molecular precursor doses (PD) and, therefore, different resulting GNR
coverages. Our investigation reveals that GNR growth location on the Au(788)
substrate is coverage-dependent. Furthermore, scanning tunneling microscopy
shows a strong correlation between the GNR length evolution and both the PD and
the GNR growth location on the substrate. Employing Raman spectroscopy, we
analyze samples with eight different PDs on Au(788). We find that GNR alignment
improves with length, achieving near-perfect alignment with an average GNR
length of ~40 nm for GNRs growing solely at Au(788) step edges. To fully
exploit GNR properties in device architectures, GNRs need to be transferred
from the gold to semiconducting or insulating substrates. Upon substrate
transfer, samples with higher PD present systematically better alignment
preservation and less surface disorder, which we attribute to reduced GNR
mobility during the transfer process. PD also affects the substrate transfer
success rate, with higher success rates observed for samples with higher GNR
coverages (77%) compared to those with lower GNR coverages (53%). Our findings
characterize the important relationship between precursor dose, GNR length,
alignment quality, and surface disorder during GNR growth and upon substrate
transfer, offering crucial insights for the further development of GNR-based
nanoelectronic devices. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2407.12646 |