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Beyond graphene: Advances make reduced graphene oxide electronics feasible

03.30.17 | North Carolina State University

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Researchers at North Carolina State University have developed a technique for converting positively charged (p-type) reduced graphene oxide (rGO) into negatively charged (n-type) rGO, creating a layered material that can be used to develop rGO-based transistors for use in electronic devices.

"Graphene is extremely conductive, but is not a semiconductor; graphene oxide has a bandgap like a semiconductor, but does not conduct well at all -- so we created rGO," says Jay Narayan, the John C. Fan Distinguished Chair Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at NC State and corresponding author of a paper describing the work. "But rGO is p-type, and we needed to find a way to make n-type rGO. And now we have it for next-generation, two-dimensional electronic devices."

Specifically, Narayan and Anagh Bhaumik -- a Ph.D. student in his lab -- demonstrated two things in this study. First, they were able to integrate rGO onto sapphire and silicon wafers -- across the entire wafer.

Second, the researchers used high-powered laser pulses to disrupt chemical groups at regular intervals across the wafer. This disruption moved electrons from one group to another, effectively converting p-type rGO to n-type rGO. The entire process is done at room temperature and pressure using high-power nanosecond laser pulses, and is completed in less than one-fifth of a microsecond. The laser radiation annealing provides a high degree of spatial and depth control for creating the n-type regions needed to create p-n junction-based two-dimensional electronic devices.

The end result is a wafer with a layer of n-type rGO on the surface and a layer of p-type rGO underneath.

This is critical, because the p-n junction, where the two types meet, is what makes the material useful for transistor applications.

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The paper, "Conversion of p to n-type Reduced Graphene Oxide by Laser Annealing at Room Temperature and Pressure," is published in the Journal of Applied Physics . Bhaumik is lead author. The work was done with support from the National Science Foundation.

Journal of Applied Physics

10.1063/1.4979211

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Article Information

Contact Information

Matt Shipman
North Carolina State University
matt_shipman@ncsu.edu

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
North Carolina State University. (2017, March 30). Beyond graphene: Advances make reduced graphene oxide electronics feasible. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WWVJG91/beyond-graphene-advances-make-reduced-graphene-oxide-electronics-feasible.html
MLA:
"Beyond graphene: Advances make reduced graphene oxide electronics feasible." Brightsurf News, Mar. 30 2017, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WWVJG91/beyond-graphene-advances-make-reduced-graphene-oxide-electronics-feasible.html.